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AO FCC OnlineComments Emails FULL 201805
AO FCC OnlineComments Emails FULL 201805
AO FCC OnlineComments Emails FULL 201805
Austin Evers
American Oversight
1030 15th Street NW, Suite B255
Washington, DC 20005
By email to: [email protected]
Mr. Evers:
This letter responds to your Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for:
(1) All memoranda, reports, or other communications describing the FCC’s response to
problems with accessing or submitting comments on the Electronic Comment Filing
System (ECFS) that occurred in June 2014 regarding GN Docket No. 14-28,
“Protecting and Promoting the Open Internet” (hereinafter the “June 2014 incident”).
(2) All memoranda, reports, or other communications addressing any testing conducted
on the ECFS since the June 2014 incident, including the results of any such testing
and any modifications made to the system based on the results of that testing.
(3) All memoranda, reports, or other communications addressing the capacity of the
ECFS to receive comments, including any warnings or concerns about whether the
system could handle a high volume of comments.
(4) All memoranda, reports, or other communications describing the FCC’s response to
problems with accessing the ECFS or submitting or retaining comments on that
system in 2017 regarding WC Docket No. 17-108, “Restoring Internet Freedom.”
The Office of the Chief Information Officer searched for records responsive to your
request and located approximately 1,700 pages of records. Of these pages, 1,323 pages
are produced here. The remaining pages are withheld in full due to the reasons discussed
below. Additionally, some material on the pages produced has been redacted due to the
reasons discussed below.
Records responsive to your request were withheld or redacted under FOIA Exemption 4. 1
Exemption 4 protects matters that are “trade secrets and commercial or financial
information obtained from a person and privileged or confidential.” The withheld records
include daily news clippings compiled by non-governmental third parties and/or other
copyrighted works. These third parties compete for these subscription-based services and
hold copyrights on their products, including the compilation of the content or the content
itself. We have determined that disclosure would have an adverse effect on the copyright
holders’ potential market and is prohibited by the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. § 106, and
Exemption 4.
Records responsive to your request were withheld or redacted under FOIA Exemption 5. 2
Exemption 5 protects certain inter-agency and intra-agency records that are normally
considered privileged in the civil discovery context. Exemption 5 encompasses a
deliberative process privilege intended to “prevent injury to the quality of agency
decisions.” 3 To fall within the scope of this privilege the agency records must be both
predecisional and deliberative. 4 Predecisional records must have been “prepared in order
to assist an agency decision maker in arriving at his decision.” 5 Deliberative records
must be such that their disclosure “would expose an agency’s decisionmaking process in
such a way as to discourage candid discussion within the agency and thereby undermine
the agency’s ability to perform its functions.” 6 The redacted and withheld records consist
of internal deliberations regarding how to respond to outside requests, drafts of or edits to
Commission documents, and internal staff opinions and recommendations regarding the
events of May 2017.
We have determined that it is reasonably foreseeable that disclosure would harm the
Commission’s deliberative processes, which Exemption 5 is intended to protect. Release
of this information would chill deliberations within the Commission and impede the
candid exchange of ideas.
Records responsive to your request were redacted under FOIA Exemption 6. 7 Exemption
6 protects “personnel and medical files and similar files the disclosure of which would
constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” Balancing the public’s
right to disclosure against the individual’s right to privacy, we have determined that
release of this information would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal
1
5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4).
2
5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5).
3
NLRB v. Sears Roebuck & Co., 421 U.S. 132, 151 (1975).
4
Id. at 151-52.
5
Formaldehyde Inst. v. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs., 889 F.2d 1118, 1122 (D.C. Cir. 1989); see also
Coastal States Gas Corp. v. Dep’t of Energy, 617 F.2d 854, 866 (D.C. Cir. 1980) (“In deciding whether a
document should be protected by the privilege we look to whether the document is . . . generated before the
adoption of an agency policy and whether . . . it reflects the give-and-take of the consultative process. The
exemption thus covers recommendations, draft documents, proposals, suggestions, and other subjective
documents. . . .”).
6
Formaldehyde Inst., 889 F.2d at 1122 (quoting Dudman Commc’ns Corp. v. Dep’t of the Air Force, 815
F.2d 1565, 1568 (D.C. Cir. 1987).
7
5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6).
2
privacy. The redacted information consists of non-public phone numbers and e-mail
addresses.
We have determined that it is reasonably foreseeable that disclosure would harm the
privacy interest of the persons mentioned in these records, which Exemption 6 is intended
to protect.
Pursuant to section 0.466(a)(8) of the Commission’s rules, you have been classified for
fee purposes as category (3), “all other requesters.” 8 As an “all other requester,” the
Commission assesses charges to recover the full, reasonable direct cost of searching for
and reproducing records that are responsive to the request; however, you are entitled to
be furnished with the first 100 pages of reproduction and the first two hours of search
time without charge under section 0.470(a)(3)(i) of the Commission’s rules. 9 The
production did not involve more than 100 pages of duplication and took less than two
hours of search time. Therefore, you will not be charged any fees.
You have requested a fee waiver pursuant to section 0.470(e) of the Commission’s
rules. 10 As you are not required to pay any fees in relation to your FOIA request, the
Office of the General Counsel, which reviews such requests, does not make a
determination on your request for a fee waiver. 11
If you consider this to be a denial of your FOIA request, you may seek review by filing
an application for review with the Office of General Counsel. An application for review
must be received by the Commission within 90 calendar days of the date of this
letter. 12 You may file an application for review by mailing the application to Federal
Communications Commission, Office of General Counsel, 445 12th St SW, Washington,
DC 20554, or you may file your application for review electronically by e-mailing it to
[email protected]. Please caption the envelope (or subject line, if via e-mail) and
the application itself as “Review of Freedom of Information Action.”
If you would like to discuss this response before filing an application for review to
attempt to resolve your dispute without going through the appeals process, you may
contact the Commission’s FOIA Public Liaison for assistance at:
8
47 C.F.R. § 0.466(a)(8).
9
47 C.F.R. § 0.470(a)(3)(i).
10
47 C.F.R. § 0.470(e).
11
47 C.F.R. § 0.470(e)(5).
12
47 C.F.R. §§ 0.461(j), 1.115; 47 C.F.R. § 1.7 (documents are considered filed with the Commission upon
their receipt at the location designated by the Commission).
3
If you are unable to resolve your FOIA dispute through the Commission’s FOIA Public
Liaison, the Office of Government Information Services (OGIS), the Federal FOIA
Ombudsman’s office, offers mediation services to help resolve disputes between FOIA
requesters and Federal agencies. The contact information for OGIS is:
Sincerely,
Kevin Baker
Associate Chief Information Officer
Enclosures
cc: FCC FOIA Office
4
Andrea Kearney
Subject
Net "Slowdown"
Location: Conference Room #1
Recurrence: (none)
Code:
1
Erin McGrath
Erin
Today, advocates, nonprofits, companies, and people just like you are taking part
in a day of action to demonstrate what the Internet might look like if the Federal
Communications Commission does not implement meaningful net neutrality rules.
Websitcs including Nctfiix, Etsy. Wordpress, Fourquare, and Vimeo are displaying a
continuous site-loading icon as part of Internet Slowdown Day, in order to protest any
rules that would create Internet fast lanes.
We are thrilled to see so many sites speaking out about the real impact of net neutrality.
These sites rely on an open Tuternet, and they know that without strong rules
upholding net neutrality their future is in peril.
Loading,..
Since the DC Circuit Court struck down the FCC's net neutrality rules earlier this year,
public interest groups, members of Congress, and businesses have been calling for Ijile
H reclassification of broadband Internet in order to ensure real, nondiscriminatory
net neutrality rules. This updated classification is the only way the FCC will have the
authority to enforce meaningful net neutrality.
In five days. a final round of public comments on net neutrality will be due to the
Federal Communications Commission. Take action here and tell the FCC to
implement Title II and eliminate fast lanes on the Internet. And check out our new
website, Video Creators for Net Neutrality, which showcases online video creators
who rely on an open Internet to reach their audiences.
Tweet this: #InlemetSlowdown today for an open Internet! Tell @FCC to use Title IT
for real #NetNeutrality: bit.ly/l qUmI if publicknowledge
2
Andrea Kearney
Dear Jonathan,
With the FCCs open comment period on rules for the Open Internet due to
close on September 15, PPI released a new report, The Best Path Forward
1
on Net Neutrality, by PPI Senior Fellow Dr. Hal Singer and Brookings Non -
Resident Fellow Bob Litan. Writing for Forbes, Singer argued that in order to
keep investment strong the FCC should avoid rate regulation with Title II and
rely on Section 706 authority adjudicate on a case-by-case basis. By doing
this, Singer notes, we will continue to nurture and stimulate investment at both
the edge and core. Singer also appeared on WJLA NewsChannel 8 to discuss
the Open Internet Rules and the "Internet Slowdown Day". "Fast lanes is a
loaded term," said Singer. "What I prefer to say is 'just say no to slow lanes.'"
Regards,
Progossive Policy Institute' 1101 1410 St NW, Suite 1200 Washrngton, DC 20000
Youre receivhg this small because of your interest In the Progesaivs PolIcy Inslilute. No interested anymore? Unsubscribo
lnstantiy.
2
Andrea Kearney
Mark,
Does the FCC have any comment on today's Internet Slowdown Day protests?
Thanks,
Vera Bergengruen
McClatchy Newspapcrs
Office 202-383-6011
Mabfle:
1
Andrea Kearney
Mark,
Does the FCC have any comment on today's Internet Slowdown Day protests?
Thanks,
Vera L3ergengruen
McC]archy NeWSpaperS
Office: 202-383-6011
Mobfle:
re
From:
To: iLoIin Shannon GFlson
Cc: Rrth MUkmn; P1i Verveer; 3onathar, SqUat; im Mart
Subject: Re: Net slow down
Date: Monday, September 08, 2014 4:25:04 PM
Tom Wheeler
Chairman
Federal Communications Commission
2O2418.10OO
From Gigi Sohn
Se t: onday, September 8, 2014 12:52 PM
To: * Shannon Gilson
Cc: u Milkman; Philip Verveer; )onathan Sallet; Kim Hart
Subject: RE: Net slow down
http://www.dailydotcom/politics/net-neutrality-jnternet_sJowdowndayfcc/
Sagar
All, just as an FYI, they put out this press release. Note the highlighted portion.
Mike Hennigan
FCC history was made yesterday. The Commission has now received more than 1.47 million comments as part of our
Open Internet proceeding, breaking the record set after Janet Jackson's infamous halftime performance at the 2004
Super Bowl. The volume of public feedback in this proceeding has been commensurate with the importance of this
effort to preserve a free and open Internet.
The new mark was set thanks in part to a coordinated effort yesterday to get Internet freedom supporters to express
their views with the Commission. The high-volume of comments driven by this national campaign overwhelmed the
Commission's IT networks at times. As a result, we have not been able to fully process all of the comments submitted
yesterday.
The Commission isworking to ensure that they are processed and that we have a full accounting of the number of
comments received as soon as possible. Most important, commenters should know that all of these comments will be
reviewed and considered as part of the rulemaking process.
Of course, this proceeding remains open, and we expect another surge of public input as we approach the deadline for
reply comments in the coming days. In the Commissipn's embrace of Open Data and a commitment to openness and
transparency throughout the Open Internet proceedings, the FCC would like to make available a Common Separated
Values (CSV) file for bulk upload of comments given the exceptional interest in providing comments. All comments will
be received and recorded through the same process we are applying for the openinternetcfcc.gov emails.
Attached is a link to the CSV file template along with instructions. Once completed, the CSV file can be emailed to
[email protected] where if it matches the template the individual comments will be filed for the public record with
the Electronic Comment Filing System. For import, we encourage CSV files of 9MB or less via email.
The bottom line is that the Commission welcomes the record-setting level of public input in this proceeding, and we
want to do everything we can to make sure everyone's voice are heard and reflected in the public record.
1
The volume of public feedback in the Open Internet proceeding has been commensurate with the
importance of the effort to preserve a free and open Internet.
The Commission is working to ensure that all comments are processed and that we have a full
accounting of the number received as soon as possible. Most important, all of these comments will be
considered as part of the rulemaking process. While our system is catching up with the surge of public
comments, we are providing a third avenue for submitting feedback on the Open Internet proceeding.
In the Commission's embrace of Open Data and a commitment to openness and transparency
throughout the Open Internet proceedings, the FCC is making available a Common Separated Values
(CSV)fi[e for bulk upload of comments given the exceptional public interest.. All comments will be
received and recorded through the same process we are applying for the openinternetfcc.gov emails.
Attached is a link to the CSV file template along with instructions. Once completed, the CSV file can be
emailed to openinternetfcc.gov where if it matches the template the individual comments will be filed
for the public record with the Electronic Comment Filing System. When you email this file, please use
the subject "CSV".We encourage CSV files of 9MB or less via email,
The Commission welcomes the record-setting level of public input in this proceeding, and we want todo
everything we can to make sure all voices are heard and reflected in the public record.
From: Susan Szulman
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 10:27 AM
To: Kim Hart; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield
Cc: Meribeth McCarrick; Sharon Hurd
Subject: FW: FCC comments inquiry
Hello,
My name is Greg Otto and I am a reporter with FedScoop. I am trying to reach Kim Hart.
I had some inquiries about the new round of comments that pushed the Open Internet comment total passed 3
million. I understand that the ECFS experienced a slowdown due to the flood of comments this week, and that
a high portion of the new comments came from bots. I was looking for more information on where the bots
came from, and how ECFS handled this flood of new traffic.
Feel free to call me at the number below to discuss this. Email is fine as well.
Greg Otto
Tech Reporter
FedScoop
610.223.4586
Twitter: (ägregotto
2
Count Open Internet Co ents. Receivi
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E
3 iooooo
0406 June ECFS
l July - CF$ bit by
Initial Open Internet proceeds without issUe
excessive number of
Proceed 1fl8 (1428) and hits highest
external searches, still
Oper For Comments concurrent number of
nianaes to natch the
comments sub miued to date
level of comments
03 June -Atl900Team
implemented workarou rid
to data base deadIocks
Daily tntervals
Midnight 0! count
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily 01 email Total 01 email Daily CSV
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments
received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126
4
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily 01 email Total 01 email Daily CSV Total CSV
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments Minus 01 emails
comments comments
- - posted into ECFS
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126
250 , 000
11
a to
co
with
200 , 000
O 16 July - ECFS receives a total
number of comments that are
more than 12x what was seen
on 02 June following viral video
with no traffic issues
w
o 150 , 000 ______________________________________
C
w
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04-O6June-ECFS
15 July - ECFS hit by
- Initial Open Internet proceeds without issue
excessive number of 10 Sept -
Proceeding (14-28) and hits highest
external searches still from 6:30-
Open For Comments concurrent number of
manages to match the workarou
comments submitted to date -
previous high 04-06 June
level of comments
03 June - At 1900 Team
250 , 000
11 Sept
a total
comme
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2O0 , 000
3 16 July - ECFS receives a total
number of comments that are
0.. more than 12x what was seen
on 02 June following viral video
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a)
150, 000
____________________________________________
3 ioo, ooo ________________________________
04-OBJune-ECFS
15 July - ECFS hit by
Initial Open Internet proceeds without issue
excessive number of 10 Sept Brie
Proceeding (14 28) and hits highest
external searches still from 630 950
Open For Comments concurrent numberof
manages to match the• workaround i
commen ts su b mi tt ed t o d a t e
50 000 previous high 04-06 Juns I_______________________________________________________
level of comments
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implemented workaround
Mike Hennigan
-d.
Kim
Inside the collapse of the FCC's digital infrastructure - and the rush to save it
By Nancy Scola September24 at 4:21 PM
infrastructure-and-the-rush-to-save-it!
Federal Communications Commission headquarters in Southwest Washington. (Photo courtesy the FCC)
1
When the deadline hit last week on the official round of public feedback as the Federal Communication Commission
makes rules on so-called net neutrality, it triggered a tsunami of online responses. When all was said and done, 3.7
million comments had been recorded by the federal government, more than the FCC has gotten on any debate in its 80-
year history.
All were filtered through an obscure but critically important piece of software called the Electronic Comment Filing
System, the commission's online system for public input that is, remarkably, nearly the same as it was when it debuted
17 years ago. But that flood of public interest revealed just how dated the FCC's online public engagement infrastructure
has become.
As the system strained under the attention, grass-roots activists and staffers inside the FCC worked together, hour-by-
hour, to keep it up and running, At times they got on each others nerves; at others they pulled together. But all were
coping with the same decades-old technology that, no one can now deny, simply isn't up to the age of digital civic
engagement. The FCC online commenting system's sputtering was an embarrassment to an agency eager to prove it is
competent enough to make rules around modern technology and a frustration for groups with names like Fight for the
Future and Demand Progress that are eager to prove both their organizing chops and the rightness of their issue.
That we are seeing an increasingly networked, politically engaged public run smack into the limitations of government IT
isn't news to those charged with running the technology. For the last year, David Bray has been the FCC's chief
information officer. Style-wise, the blue-and-gold online filing Web site looks behind the times. Dig deeper, Bray says,
and it only gets worse.
"Being a federal dO," Bray says, "means buying a used car, driving it off the lot, and only then looking under the hood
and seeing what engine you've bought. And I've got a pretty old engine."
And yet, the number that would eventually spit out of that creaky online machine mattered a great deal to those trying
to show how invested the mainstream American public had become in the net neutrality debate. Holmes Wilson is the
co-founder and co-director of Fight for the Future, one of the handful of networked activist groups leading the charge.
"The final count was extremely important to us," Wilson says. "When you have a protest, the first thing anyone says is,
'How many people came?"
2
Laying a pipeline into the federal apparatus
An FCC chart showing the flow of online comments passing through its Electronic Comment Filing system around the
'net neutrality" debate.
A trail of e-mails that shot back and forth between activists and the agency around that mid-September deadline
revealed an unusual collaboration. All involved saw the deluge coming, and activists -- planning a one-day "Internet
Slowdown" that called on the public to contact the FCC -- reached out to the bureaucrats to see how they might help
keep the system afloat.
There were early signs of trouble. 11You'd write some very long thing and hit submit," Wilson says of the average
commenter's user experience on FCC.gov, "and it would spin for five minutes and then show you some
incom prehensible error message."
It's worth noting that the activists had decided to avoid directing would-be commenters to [email protected] , the
e-mail address the bureaucracy had set up as an alternative input mechanism. As a bit of a make-do measure, e-mails
were handled in a quirky way. They were counted individually as they came into an agency inbox, but were uploaded to
EFCS in large PDF batches, and so thus counted online as only one record.
No, the activists wanted a direct line into the vein of the comment tallying machine. So they built clever tools, one of
which was hosted on a site calledBattle for the Net and pushed out to users across the Web. The trick to it was if the FCC
Web site spun out and the comment didn't register in the system, the activists platform would save a copy and attempt
to refile it later. (Observers point out that the technique gave the activists another useful opportunity: the ability to
capture e-mail address to add to their mailing lists.)
And so, on Sept. 10, the activists saved up a batch of some 100,000 comments and then tried to file them through ECFS.
But the system was having trouble accepting them.
At 3:45 p.m., the activists sent the agency officials a note: "We noticed the FCC site was having issues, so we paused
submission of comments. We'll try turning it back on a bit later as things quiet down."
At 3:57 p.m., the FCC replied: "We turned off conversion - the volume level of ECFS comments had recently gone up
starting at 3 p.m. and was straining the submissions by causing database deadlocks. If you want to continue at the
volume level you were doing around 11 a.m., we'll let you know if any issues return?"
There was more back and forth, and shortly after 7 p.m. the FCC said that it was working on a fix. The issue, upon
investigation, seemed to be that each filed comment creates a unique connection to the database, one that
automatically times-out in short order. But a batch of, say, 25,000 comments at once was creating 25,000 connections
that seemed to persist. In response, the FCC team set up an alert that let one of their technologists know when a thick
cord of database connections needed to be manually snipped.
At 10:10 p.m., agency staff again e-mailed the activists: "You can start uploading comments again. Thank you for the
patience."
The activists began transferring big quantities of comments yet again. But by a 11:45 p.m. they realized that they had a
backlog of half a million comments; they wouldn't be done with the moving process in time to count for that day of
action's tally and the inevitable round of press attention.
So they sent a note to the FCC aides letting them know that they were backed up and couldn't get all their comments in
by the daily deadline.
Dave Karpf is an assistant professor in the School of Media and Public Affairs at the George Washington University and
author of the 2012 book "The MoveOn Effect: The Unexpected Transformation of American Political Advocacy." What's
striking in this case, says Karpf, is that "this particular politicized public has workarounds."
"If I was still at the Sierra Club," where he worked before becoming an academic, "and this was a climate issue, we
probably would have just thrown up our hands and issued a press release."
Searching for workarounds, on and off the federal payroll
The agency technologists scrambled for a way to move ahead. After vetting the proposal with the commission's lawyers,
on Sept. 11, the day after Internet Slowdown Day, they posted to the agency's blog on FCC.govinstructions for filing
comments in giant batches by converting them into Comma Separated Values, or CSV, file format and then shipping
those digital packages along to the agency.
3
On the backend, the technologists then set up an automated process for finding e-mails with, per the instructions, CSV"
in the subject line and moving them directly to a Box.com online cloud storage account. (That introduced an extra step,
but the agency aides were reluctant to simply open up a digital public dropbox, as anything could be put in there,
including pornography. The "CSV" subject line test wasn't much of a preventative device, but at least this way the
agency would have an e-mail address on record.)
While the agency was piecing together those measures, the advocates saw that overnight their backlog had grown to
three-quarters of a million comments. But by midnight, only a fraction had been formally filed into ECFS. So they asked
the agency to pass along any press inquiries to the advocacy groups so that they could relay their unofficial but accurate
count.
But press management is an imperfect science, and word that the total number of file comments was an underwhelming
100,000 found its way out of the FCC press shop. "That was wrong," Ammori, the activist-lawyer, says of the tally. "Very
wrong." That figure, though, was printed and reprinted widely on Thursday, including - to the particular annoyance of
the organizers - in the New Yorker. Feeling that they'd held back filing some of their batched comments because of the
FCC's guidance, the advocates were dismayed.
To ease minds and soothe tensions, the advocates and bureaucrats worked together to correct the record. Shortly after
1 p.m. Sept. 11, the FCC press secretary sent out a carefully crafted tweet: "Due to high number of comments received
in last 24 hours, we do not yet have an official comment count. Will provide update ASAP."
The activists kept up their bulk submission of comments over the weekend, and by the following Monday, all were in.
Near the end of the day on Tuesday, Sept. 16, the FCC spokesperson sent reporters a note with a final, official tally:
some 3.7 million comments. A whopping 828,000 came in during just the last few days of the activists' push.
State-of-the-art back when Bill Clinton was president
From the beginning, the Electronic Comment Filing System was aimed at using the Internet to level the playing field at
an agency that has never had trouble hearing from big business and their lawyers but has sometimes struggled to
connect with the general public.
Kevin Werbach was policy counsel at the FCC in the 1990s. The American public, he says now, was increasingly using the
Internet to interact, but anyone who wanted to see what was being said to the agency in the course of
telecommunications debates had to trudge down to a single document headquarters and pay for copies. They started
with an e-mail inbox, but even then it required too much administrative wrangling.
So Werbach and others extracted a bill of the supplemental funding from the landmark 1996 Telecommunications Act -
- "I believe it was $200,000 to $300,000," recalls Werbach - and set up a Web-based system called QuickStart. But that
first system only went half-way; it was a physical-digital hybrid. Commenters sent in their filings on diskette, the
contents of which were eventually posted online.
The agency soon began a push to make the process fully virtual and to get the digital comments to count as part of the
official record. That expansion, the agency noted optimistically, nearly two decades ago, "will help the FCC gain
experience in managing the workflow of receiving comments in electronic format, and will also give the public an
opportunity to try out the new system." (The FCC's records from this time reveal both an amazing amount of foresight
and an overabundance of faith in the agency's technological capacities: "Although comments filed via the Internet may
take time in transit to the FCC due to network congestion or large attached files," the commission wrote in April of 1997,
"we believe that this transmission period will usually be quite short.")
For the late '90s, these forays into digital governance qualified the FCC as an early adopter. The thing is, ECFS hasn't
changed much since. Says Werbach, 'How many major Internet applications from the mid-'90s, before Google was even
founded, are still going strong?" Still, he says, it needs an upgrade.
In the absence of funding, a cobbled-together fix
Today the FCC is a communications agency that can't communicate, and that irony is not lost on those inside the agency.
"It is particularly distasteful that the FCC - the agency entrusted with promoting a world-class broadband infrastructure
for the nation - could ever be incapable of dealing with Americans expressing themselves via that broadband
capability," FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said in a blog post from mid-July,
Reed Hundt was the agency's chairman from 1993 to 1997. It was on his watch that ECFS was created, and he's
encouraging his successor to see the historic level of public engagement as an opportunity to more fully embrace that
feedback loop. "Any time an FCC chairman can get any level of attention from millions of people," Hundt says, "it's
fundamentally a great opportunity for the chairman and a good day for democracy."
4
But even just rebuilding a working Electronic Comment Filing System is no simple matter. The ECFS that the public sees
is only the tip of an iceberg; on the backend, the system is tied into seven databases that are used by 18 offices within
the FCC. What's more, ECFS is just one of 200 often-dated IT systems in use inside the agency - or one for every nine of
the agency's 1,750 employees. "Relic systems," Wheeler called them when he went before the House Appropriations
Committee for the agency's budget approval in March.
The rub? These systems, testified Wheeler, are "costing the agency more to service than they would to replace over the
long term."
Congress, however, has a history of balking at smart long-term investments. To fund the agency next year, Wheeler has
asked for some $376 million. Of that, $9.2 million is allocated for the "modernization of aging IT systems." There's also a
pool of money to hire 10 more technologists; at the moment, the agency has 36 - or about half of what it says an
agency of its size should have.
House appropriators cut some $53 million from that request, dropping the agency below even what it's on track to
spend this year. If the budget passes, Wheeler will face tough choices about where to spend the commission's funds.
But those in the FCC tech shop aren't waiting. Under ClO Bray's direction, the team is whipping together a stripped-
down reboot of the electronic comment filing system. The new software will capitalize on what the technology world
has figured out in the last 20 years about making digital systems more resilient - such as cloud computing (definitely) or
CAPTCHA tests (possibly) to make sure submitters are human. The plan is to get that stop-gap system in place by the
end of the year.
It's not a solution. But it is a fix. And at the moment, that seems to be the best anyone can do.
Nancy Scola is a reporter who covers the intersection of technology and public policy, politics, and governance.
5
Mike Hennigan
3I
-d.
Original Message-----
From: FCC Office of Media Relations
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 08:02 AM Eastern Standard Time
To: OMR Clips Distro
Subject: FW: FCC Daily News Briefing for Monday, September 8, 2014
CHAIRMAN-COMMISSIONERS-COMMISSION:
+ Washington Post: Net Neutrality Opponents Are Taking A Page Out Of Their Rivals' Grassroots Playbook*
+ CNET News: Top Websites Join Internet Slowdown Day In Symbolic Protest OF "Fast Lanes)*
^ Slate Magazine: Tech Companies Are Planning "Go Slow" Day To Protest The FCC Net Neutrality Proposal.*
+ PC World: Net Neutrality Advocates Plan Slow-Lane Protest*
^ Tech Times: Fight For Net Neutrality: Sept. 10 Will Be "Internet Slowdown Day*
+ BGR: Why Is Net Neutrality Important: It Ensures Your Porn Won't Get Slowed*
^ Mashable: What Would Happen To The Internet Without Net Neutrality?*
+ Paste Magazine: Why The FCC Can't Save The Intern et*
+ Holland (Ml) Sentinel: Opinion: FCC Must Act To Prevent Traffic Jams On The Internet*
+ Politico: What's Next After Wheeler's Speech On Slow Broadband Speeds*
+ The Hill: Netflix Chief To John Oliver: "We Owe Youi*
+ Variety: Comcast Defends Merger After FCC Chair Laments Lack Of Consumer Choice*
+ Fierce Cable: Wheeler's Comments Foreboding To Comcast-TWC Merger? Depends Who You Ask*
+ Fierce CIO: FCC Pushing For More Broadband Choices*
+ Consumerist: Comcast: Approve TWC Merger Because Broadband Will Still Suck Just As Much*
+ Deadline Hollywood: Comcast Parries FCC Chairman's Attack On Cable's Broadband Clout*
+ Tech Times: FCC Will Protect And Encourage Broadband Competition, Vows Tom Wheeler: *
+ The Week: The FCC Chairman Thinks Your Internet Is Too Slow And Too Expensive*
+ Broadband Breakfast News: FCC Chairman TomWheeler Promotes Google Fiber's Impact On Competition
And Gigabit Networks*
+ Washington Post: Must TV Station Advertising Departments Consult With News Departments To Investigate
Who's Funding Political Ads?*
+ National Journal: Senators Take Aim At Rising Cable Bills4
+ Variety: Senators Unveil Legislation To Allow Choice Of Broadcast Channels*
+ Ars Technica: Cable Companies Want To Unbundle Broadcast TV, And Broadcasters Are Angry
+ Bloomberg News: Dish Said To Discuss T-Mobile Deal With Deutsche Telekom*
+ Reuters: Dish Said To Discuss T-Mobile Deal With Deutsche Telekom: Bloomberg
+ Tech Times: Dish Wants To Discuss T-Mobile Acquisition With Deutsche Telekom*
+ Broadcasting & Cable: Telecom Net Suppliers Back FCC Preemption*
+ Carolina (NC) Journal: Wilson Asks FCC To Void Broadband Limits*
+ Forbes: Amazon, Twitch, And The Title II Threat To Web Video*
+ New Orleans Times-Picayune: WVUE's Saints Broadcast On DirecTV? No Word Yet From The Raycom-DirecTV
Negotiations
+ Multichannel News: DirecTV, Raycom Reach Retrans Deal*
+ Variety: DirecTV, Raycom Media Blackout Ends Just In Time For NFL Games*
+ Deadline Hollywood: Raycom, DirecTV Agreement Restores 43 Broadcast Stations*
+ WAFF-TV Huntsville (AL): Raycom Media Reaches Agreement In Principle With DirecTV
+ Richmond (VA) Times-Dispatch: DirecTV, Raycom Reach DeaI*
+ Montgomery (AL) Advertiser: WSFA, Raycom Blackout Ends On DIRECTV*
+ Philadelphia Inquirer: For Comcast, Independent Networks Will Be A Merger lssue*
+ New York Post: TWC Customer Data Could Give Comcast An Unfair Advantage*
+ New York Post: Media Rivals Begin To Cite Megamerger Risks*
+ New York Post: Any Curbs On Comcast Alliance Are Tough To Enforce*
+ Wicked Local (MA): Westport's Bid To Move On From Charter Cable Agreement Is On Track*
2
+ Houston Chronicle: Text-To-911 Option Coming To Harris And Fort Bend Counties*
+ New York Post: Text-To-911 Capability Could Be Coming To New York City*
+ CNN: Opinion: Why Is The NFL Still Blacking Out Games?*
+ Ars Technica: Google Silent On Support For Group Opposing Net Neutrality And Muni Broadband*
+ Radio World: Kintronic Presses FCC On AM Standards*
+ Radio and Music: Kintronic Labs Concerned About Decline Of AM Radio In US, Seeks Meeting With FCC*
+ Inside Radio: AM Antenna Firm Seeks Minimum Receiver Standards.*
+ New York Post: Pirate Radio Stations Hijacking The Airwaves In Brooklyn*
+ eWeek: Verizon To Pay FCC $7.4 Million To Settle Privacy Probe*
+ Top Tech News: FCC Fines Verizon $7.4 Million For Privacy Violations*
+ Kinston (NC) Free Press: Media General, WNCT Want WRAL Out Of Local Markets*
+ Parsippany Focus: Office Of Emergency Management Speaks At Kiwanis CIub*
+ UberGizmo: Mysterious 7-Inch Tablet Arrives At The FCC*
BROADBAND:
+ Denver Post: Opinion: Should Colorado Broadband Law Be Revoked? No
+ Fierce Telecom: AT&T, Box Drive Business Wireless/Wireline Integration With New Cloud, Mobility Solution
+ Florence (AL) Times Daily: Franklin County Continues Push For Broadband
+ Los Angeles Daily News: New Rules Could Cost More For Speedy Internet Service*
+ Chattanooga (TN) Times Free Press: Netflix Backs Chattanooga's Broadband Expansion With FCC*
+ Charlottesville (VA) Tomorrow: Albemarle Debates Broadband Expansion•
INTERNET POLICY:
+ Wall Street Journal: The Internet Power Vacuum Worsens
+ New York Times: Two Cities With Blazing Internet Speed Search For A Killer App
+ Bloomberg News: Google Trawls Europe To Search For Right-To-Be Forgotten Answers
+ Reuters: Facebook Ready To Spend Billions To Bring Whole World Online: Zuckerberg
CONSUMERS:
+ USA Today: California's Smart On Phone "Kill Switch"
CYBERSECURITY:
+ Los Angeles Times: Sen. Dianne Feinstein: Cybersecurity Bill Strikes Right Balance
+ The Hill: Hack Attacks Spur Calls For Cyber Insurance
+ Boston Globe: Health Care Industry Ill-Prepared For Vicious Cyberthreats
^ Venture Beat: Opinion: What Enterprises Can Learn From The ICIoud Celebrity Photo Hack
WIRELESS:
+ Fierce Wireless: Sprint Adds 15 Rural Carriers To LTE Roaming Program
+ GigaOM: Sprint Adds 15 New Regional Carriers To Its LTE Rural Roaming Program
+ Fierce WirelessTech: Military, Public-Safety LTE Small Cell Revenues To Reach $350M By 2020, Says Report
+ GigaOM: Data Plans Are The Biggest Obstacle To Mobile Video's Future
PRIVACY:
+ New York Times: Facebook Generation Rekindles Expectation Of Privacy Online
+ The Hill: Privacy Groups Pressure Senate On NSA
HEALTH TECHNOLOGY:
3
+ Fierce Medical Devices: Med Tech Startups Flourish As Access To IT Gets Cheaper, Easier
+ FierceHealthlT: 3 Cloud Concerns For Hospital IT Execs
+ FierceHealthlT: "Small" As Important As 'Big' When It Comes To Healthcare Data
+ FierceHealthlT: Use Care Coordination, MHealth To Better Serve Vulnerable Populations
+ FierceEMR: Why Congress Must Be Cautious About Spending More For HIT Interoperability
+ Venture Beat: If Apple's Smartwatch Succeeds, Here's How It Will Change Health
+ Albuquerque (NM) Journal: "Telehealth" Could Revolutionize Global Medical Treatment
+ iHealthBeat: Technology Advances Boosting Telehealth, But Challenges To Widespread Use Remain
+ mHealth News: MHealth Masters: Harry Greenspun On The Promise Of Applied Analytics
SOCIAL MEDIA:
+ Ars Technica: Facebook's "Privacy Checkup" Aims To Make Users Comfortable Again
+ Re/code: Twitter Media Boss Katie Jacobs Stanton Interview
^ TechCrunch: Reddit Takes Down Groups Hosting Celebrity Nudes, Walks A Blurred Line On Free Speech
+ Venture Beat: Reddit Bans Sub-Community Responsible For Spreading Leaked Celebrity Photos
INTERNATIONAL:
+ Los Angeles Times: China To Keep Closer Eye On U.S. TV Shows Streamed On Internet
+ Associated Press: Video Sites Need China's OK To Air Foreign Content
+ Bloomberg News: Vodafone Italian Fiber Lines To Reach 7 Million Homes By 2017
+ Bloomberg News: South Africa Mobile-Phone Rate Cuts Eased After Objections
+ Fierce Wireless: Deutsche Telekom Steps Up FMC Strategy With "MagentaElNS" Launch
+ Ad Week: Canada's Proposal To Deregulate Cable TV Market Worries U.S. Content Providers
Chairman-Commissioners-Commission:
WASHINGTON POST: NET NEUTRALITY OPPONENTS ARE TAKING A PAGE OUT OF THEIR RIVALS'
GRASSROOTS PLAYBOOK*
If there's one thing the Internet is good at, it's galvanizing Web users to action with a good David-and-Goliath
story. For months, advocates of strong net neutrality have been whipping supporters into opposing large,
incumbent corporations that stand to benefit from charging content firms for better, faster access to
consumers. Some broadband companies have pushed back strongly against that impression, but that's only
served to highlight the bright line dividing commercial Internet providers from ordinary Americans.
Now, however, some who see it from the internet service providers' perspective are taking a page out of the
4
public interest groups' playbook, with a bit of a David-and-Goliath story of their own. A market-minded think
tank is making a play for Americans who object to heavier regulation of Internet service providers. The push
began this week with a Web site, Don't Break the Net, that urges the chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission not to subject Internet providers to heavier regulation.
Behind the Web site is a libertarian think tank known as TechFreedom. TechFreedom openly draws inspiration
from the much more experienced and powerful progressive grassroots groups: Don't Break the Net
encourages you to write to the FCC advocating a "hands-off" policy. And doing so will automatically add you to
TechFreedom's e-mail list (in the non-profit universe, the size of a group's e-mail list is often taken as a sign of
its wealth and influence). Don't Break the Net even acknowledges copying the open-source code that went
into the net neutrality advocates' own site, Battle for the Net, which represents some of the Web's most well-
known properties - Mozilla, the maker of the Firefox browser; Etsy; reddit; Kickstarter and others.
CNET NEWS: TOP WEBSITES JOIN INTERNET SLOWDOWN DAY IN SYMBOLIC PROTEST OF "FAST LANES"*
Internet Slowdown Day will be headlined by several major companies when Web users and so-called Net
activists come together on Sept. 10 to demonstrate what the Internet might look like if so-called fast lanes are
allowed as part of the new Net neutrality rules that the Federal Communications Commission is currently
considering.
Fight for the Future, the group that is behind the advocacy event, announced Thursday that several top Web
sites - including Reddit, Foursquare, Vimeo, Wordpress and Boing Boing - will take part in the online event.
Lest you be worried that your Internet service will get bogged down on Wednesday, fear not. Internet
Slowdown Day is meant to be a symbolic protest.
http ://www.cnet.com/news/top-websites-join-internet-slowdown-day-in-symbolic-protest-of-fast-tanes/
• SLATE MAGAZINE: TECH COMPANIES ARE PLANNING "GO SLOW" DAY TO PROTEST THE FCC NET
NEUTRALITY PROPOSAL.*
The FCC's net neutrality proposal, announced in April, has received steady criticism from advocates of free and
open Internet. And more than 1 million responses poured in when the agency opened a public comment
period. Now influential tech companies are preparing to make Sept. 10 a day of protest called "Go Slow" day.
Mozilla, Reddit, KickStarter, FourSquare, Vimeo, and Meetup will all simulate what the user experience could
be like on their sites without current net neutrality protections. The goal is to protest proposed rules that
would allow Internet service providers to create fast lanes for companies that can afford to pay. Even porn
sites like PornHub, Redlube, and YouPorn are joining in (though a PornHub representative on Reddit was
quick to note that it won't actually slow down the porn-users will just see a big display about net neutrality
when they visit the site). That's commitment, people.
S
Startup lobbying group Engine is organizing the protest. It explained in a blog post:
Several high-profile websites-including Kickstarter, Etsy, Reddit, Mozilla and Meetup-will display spinning-
wheel icons next Wednesday in' an attempt to show visitors the Internet slow lanes they say will appear if the
U.S. Federal Communications Commission doesn't pass strong net neutrality regulations.
The symbolic Internet slowdown will include the dreaded site-loading spinning icon to symbolize what net
neutrality advocates believe the Web could look like without strong rules. Participating sites, which won't
really slow down their load times, will encourage visitors to call or email U.S. policymakers in support of net
neutrality rules.
Without strong net neutrality rules, the Internet could be divided into slow and fast lanes, many net neutrality
advocates say. Earlier this year, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler proposed new net neutrality rules that would
allow broadband providers to engage in "commercially reasonable" traffic management, and many net
neutrality advocates suggested his rules would lead to a slower Internet for many websites.
TECH TIMES: FIGHT FOR NET NEUTRALITY: SEPT. 10 WILL BE "INTERNET SLOWDOWN DAY"*
Online activists are pressing federal regulators to create stronger rules that would protect net neutrality which
would mean an equal treatment of all Web content. Huge online sites and social networks are encouraged to
join the protest by placing a customized code on their site that would depict a "loading "icon. Through this,
they can voice out the message that Internet traffic could suffer a slowdown if regulators fail to create
stronger rules on net neutrality. The protest code would also enable visitors to access the comment section
where they can show their support to net neutrality which would eventually be sent to the Federal
Communications Commission and to certain elected officials.
Dubbed as "Internet Slowdown Day," the online demonstration will be using the "loading" icon for symbolic
purposes. Visitors who would see this type of icon on September 10 should notworry about an actual Internet
slowdown. It will serve as their cue to show their support byplacing a comment.
"Sites will employ icons that symbolize a slower Internet, but will not actually load more slowly," says Free
Press, one of the organizing groups of the upcoming online demonstration.
6
BGR: WHY IS NET NEUTRALITY IMPORTANT: IT ENSURES YOUR PORN WON'T GET SLOWED*
Now this is a net neutrality campaign that might catch the attention of people who normally couldn't be
bothered. On September 10th next week, several websites are planning to take part in an "Internet
Slowdown" in which they'll post symbolic "loading" icons on their sites to demonstrate what will happen to
them if the FCC goes through with its plan to sanction Internet "fast lanes" that would completely kill off net
neutrality. And now it looks like the campaign has just grabbed its most important contributors yet: Popular
porn sites.
Over at Reddit, a Pornhub representative announced that Pornhub, Redtube and Ycuporn will all be taking
part in the Internet Slowdown on September 10th. The sites won't be intentionally slowing down your favorite
porn videos, but they will be posting a "a big in-your4ace message that users will need to close" before they
can watch their desired videos. Combined, the three popular porn sites hope to reach upwards of 50 million
people to educate them about the need for net neutrality.
The Internet Slowdown campaign was created as a way to protest the FCC's proposal to let ISPs create
Internet "fast lanes" that would let some companies pay more money to get their content delivered faster
over ISPs' last mile networks. Many popular tech companies, including Google, Facebook, Microsoft, Amazon
and Netflix, have all come out against the proposal.
Simply put, net neutrality is the idea that all Internet traffic is created equal, and all users should be able to
access it as quickly as possible. If the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) doesn't establish a new set of
rules to ensure this, Internet Service Providers (ISPs) would be able to charge customers different prices for
different traffic speeds.
But what would that mean for you? SumoCoupon looked into how that would change the way we go online,
and how the FCC's proposed laws could help keep the Internet neutral.
The FCC's proposals focus on making sure ISP5 are transparent about how they handle traffic, and that they
don't block any legal content or favor certain types of traffic over others. Without these principals in place, the
Internet could be a very different and expensive place.
There's no question that Net Neutrality has been this year's most hotly debated and passionately defended
political issue regarding the internet. It has often been painted as the next no-brainer that every internet user
7
should hop on the bandwagon in support of-the next SOPA, PIPA, or NSA scandal. Opposition to shocking
revelations such to these controversies sent a shockwave through the status quo of corporate government
power. It was a signpost that the millennial generation can and will rise up to resist the oppression of personal
liberties-at least when the fabric of their daily lives are at risk.
And next up was Net Neutrality. Editorials were written, Reddit posts exploded, organizations were formed,
and people even protested. The fiery sentiment behind all the hubbub was well understood: we all want a free
and open internet. None of us want big corporations or governments fiddling with the thing we've all grown
up on-the thing that has impacted our lives so fundamentally. Unfortunately, the reality of the current
situation isn't quite that simple-nor are the stakes of implementing the government regulation that has been
proposed.
At its core, the argument for Net Neutrality is an argument that all data should be treated equally and without
preference-whether that's a high-definition Netflix video or a simple text document. Proponents of Net
Neutrality refer to the continued dream of an "open internet", where no corporation or government can offer
preferences or influence what content is available to users, Again, a perfectly understandable sentiment with
all the attacks against the free internet in the last few years (again, SOPA and the NSA).
HOLLAND (MI) SENTINEL: OPINION: FCC MUST ACT TO PREVENT TRAFFIC JAMS ON THE INTERNET*
While many Americans slipped away to the beach, Internet users were busy defending the openness of a
network that has become this era's engine for free expression, ingenuity and just about everything else.
The threat comes from Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler, who has proposed new
rules that would fundamentally change the workings of the Web - leaving its fate in the hands of a few
powerful phone and cable companies.
Everyone's still buzzing about FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler's declaration .Thursday that "a 25 Mbps connection
is fast becoming table stakes." He got an especially warm welcome in the public-interest community, which
has otherwise been none too pleased with Wheeler's Internet policy. Public Knowledge's Harold Feld said:
"Today, Chairman Wheeler becomes the first FCC chairman to acknowledge what American businesses and
consumers have known for a very long time - we are not getting the broadband speeds we need at prices we
can afford." Wheeler even got support from across the spectrum - as top AT&T lobbyist Jim Cicconi said, "We
agree with Chairman Wheeler's vision that all consumers should have access to robust broadband, and that
they should have a competitive choice."
8
The big question on everyone's lips, though, is what this speech really means for policy at the agency -
especially in its review of the proposed Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger. If there's not enough
competition to encourage faster broadband now, would there be after that merger? For quite a few in the
public-interest community, the answer is a clear "no." To them, blocking the deal is the only move that
squares with what Wheeler outlined Thursday. "The real proof will be in the agency's actions and not just its
speeches," FreePress's Matt Wood said. "Beyond blocking the disastrous merger proposals in front of it, the
FCC needs to take concrete steps to promote competition."
http://www.politico.com/morningtech/O914/morningtech15190.html
Netflix CEO Reed Hastings thinks comedian John Oliver is responsible for the Federal Communications
Commission's support for more high-speed Internet options.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler's claim that three-quarters of the country have "no competitive choice" for fast
Internet service providers and his support for new efforts like Google Fiber is a signal that the commission has
raised its sights to a loftier goal, Hastings said.
VARIETY: COMCAST DEFENDS MERGER AFTER FCC CHAIR LAMENTS LACK OF CONSUMER CHOICE*
After FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler gave a speech pointing out the lack of high-speed Internet service options
for most consumers, some public interest groups saw it as a swipe at industry consolidation, namely Comcast's
plans to merge with Time Warner Cable.
But on Friday, Comcast executive vice president David L. Cohen defended the merger, distancing the
company's plans from the state of the broadband marketplace. He reiterated that Comcast and Time Warner
Cable don't compete against each other in any market so the combination won't have an impact on
competition.
"To be clear, whether you are satisfied with the robust state of broadband competition today or deeply
troubled by an absence of broadband competition, our transaction will simply not have a negative impact on
the current competitive state of the broadband market in America today," he wrote. "In fact, the increased
scale created by this transaction will accelerate and encourage even more investments in R&D, innovation,
and infrastructure all of which will be good for broadband investment and competition, and ultimately
benefits consumers."
9
FIERCE CABLE: WHEELER'S COMMENTS FOREBODING TO COMCAST-TWC MERGER? DEPENDS WHO YOU
ASK*
With FCC chairman Tom Wheeler speaking at length about the general dearth of broadband competition in
the U.S. Thursday, a kind of Rorschach Test has emerged in regard to the possible implications to the proposed
Comcast/Time Warner Cable merger.
Was this Wheeler's subtle way of implying that the Federal Communications Commission is about to quell the
marriage to America's two biggest cable/broadband companies?
The Consumers Union, which stridently opposes the merger, believes so, with the group's policy counsel,
Delara Derakhshani stating, "Allowing Comcast (NASDAQ: CMCSA) to get even bigger and more powerful
would chill the competition that the chairman is seeking."
The Federal Communications Commission, or FCC, will push for more competition in the nation's broadband
space, to make up for what it views as a lack of meaningful choices for consumers. According to an article at
Compterworld, while 93 percent of the U.S. population has access to a broadband provider, fewer than 15
percent have a choice of providers in their market. "At the low end of throughput ... the majority of Americans
have a choice of only two providers. That is what economists call a duopoly, a marketplace that is typically
characterized by less than vibrant competition," FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler was quoted as saying.
http ://www.fiercecio.com/story/news-scan-photo-Ieak-has-apple-tighten-icloud-security-fcc-pushing-more-
bro/2014-09-05
CONSUMERIST: COMCAST: APPROVE TWC MERGER BECAUSE BROADBAND WILL STILL SUCK JUST AS MUCH*
Yesterday, FCC Chair Tom Wheeler surprised a lot of people by publicly discussing the woeful state of
broadband competition in the U.S. Some viewed his remarks as an indicator that the commission is leaning
toward blocking the pending Comcast/Time Warner Cable merger, but the ever-optimistic (read: delusional)
Comcast argue that Wheeler's words actually support the deal.
"The facts are simple," writes Comcast's merger whisperer, Exec. VP David Cohen. "Our transaction will have
no negative impact on the competitiveness of the broadband consumer market... Every consumer in America
will have the same choices among broadband providers after this transaction as before."
As we've said repeatedly, this lack of competition - and the fact that it's only going to remain the same - is
precisely the problem with this merger.
10
http://consumerist.com/2014/Og/05/comcasta pprove-twc-merger-because-broadband_will-stillsuckjustas
much!
DEADLINE HOLLYWOOD: COMCAST PARRIES FCC CHAIRMAN'S ATTACK ON CABLE'S BROADBAND CLOUT*
Here's an an example of why Comcast EVP David Cohen is so valuable to the company. In a statement today,
the smooth point person for the cable giant's planned acquisition of Time Warner Cable made it seem like
Comcast is on the same page with FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler - even after a speech yesterday that looked to
some like a veiled challenge to the deal. The chief communications regulator said there's "simply no
competitive choice for most Americans" in the cable-controlled market for speedy broadband services, and
that "is not tolerable." He and other commissioners will decide whether to approve the deal which would
leave Comcast with about a third of all broadband subscribers.
Instead of taking umbrage, Cohen says he applauds Wheeler's "focus on the importance of broadband
competition to benefit all Americans." He adds that the transaction with TWC "will have no negative impact on
the competitiveness of the broadband consumer market" because "our two companies don't compete for
customers anywhere." Indeed, a bigger Comcast can "accelerate and encourage even more investments" in
the Internet - something Wheeler wants. That could "incentivize our competitors to invest, too, helping to
fuel the virtuous cycle of investment and reinvestment referenced by the Chairman in his remarks, benefiting
even more Americans."
Public Knowledge SVP Harold Feld has a different view: He says that he doesn't see how allowing any further
consolidation of the broadband market can possibly make broadband better."
http:/,/deadline.com,'2014!09/comcast-responds_fcc-chajrmanbroadbandcompetitiong300g4,,
TECH TIMES: FCC WILL PROTECT AND ENCOURAGE BROADBAND COMPETITION, VOWS TOM WHEELER: *
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler finally broke his silence on whether the
American broadband industry is competitive enough, saying "meaningful competition for high-speed wired
broadband is lacking" in the American market.
In a speech delivered at 1776, a Washington D.C.-based technology incubator, Wheeler said that less than
one-fourth of all American households have access to two or more providers offering a minimum broadband
speed of 25 Mbps, what Wheeler says is "table stakes" speed in the 21st century.
Currently, the FCC defines broadband as an Internet connection of at least 4 Mbps, which, Wheeler says, is
"yesterday's broadband." The FCC chairman says the commission is working on the minimum speed to 10
Mbps, but even that is not enough to supply the rapidly growing demand for faster broadband. In today's
households, it is not uncommon to find at least six devices connected to the Internet, with bandwidth-heavy
activities such as video and audio streaming and downloading taking place majority of the time. With the
growing adoption of broadband in healthcare and education settings, America will need more than 25 Mbps
as a minimum.
11
http
competition-vows-tom-wheeler.htm
THE WEEK: THE FCC CHAIRMAN THINKS YOUR INTERNET IS TOO SLOW AND TOO EXPENSIVE*
On Thursday, Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler said what maybe should be
obvious to every American with an internet connection: Broadband internet in the U.S. is too slow and
hampered by a lack of competition. More than half of U.S. consumers have only one choice for high-speed
internet (more than 25 Mbps), he said at tech incubator 1776, so "there is simply no competitive choice for
most Americans."
Wheeler's acknowledgment about a lack of competition may seem mundane, but it's "a fairly radical
statement at the FCC," says Amy Schatz at Re/Code. And unlike most Americans, Wheeler can do something
about it. He didn't propose any competition-boosting ideas on Thursday, but there is one thing he can do in
the short term to at least not decrease competition: Block Comcast's purchase of No. 2 rival Time Warner
Cable. The FCC is also considering whether to try to enforce popular net neutrality rules or open up special
channels for paying Internet services.
Wheeler didn't seem too keen on new rules, saying that "as must be clear by now, incentivizing competition
should precede regulation." But his speech was still welcomed by net neutrality advocates. "Looking across
the broadband landscape, we can only conclude that, while competition has driven broadband deployment, it
has not yet done so in a way that necessarily provides competitive choices for most Americans," Wheeler said.
It will be interesting to see what he plans to do about it.
http://theweek.com/speedreads/index/267612/speedreadsthefccchairmanthinksyourinternetjstoo
slow-and-too-expensive
BROADBAND BREAKFAST NEWS: FCC CHAIRMAN TOM WHEELER PROMOTES GOOGLE FIBER'S IMPACT ON
COMPETITION AND GIGABIT NETWORKS*
Google Fiber has been perhaps' the primary driver of the current push toward high-speed Internet in the
United States, Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler said in a speech here yesterday
on the future of broadband competition.
In an otherwise general speech that failed to mention major communications companies like Verizon
Communications, Comcast or Time Warner, Wheeler attributed the introduction of fiber-optic competition to
Google's bold gambit - announced in February 2010 - to enter the communications space by beginning to
build Gigabit Networks.
We've seen what happens when companies like Google bring new competition in the form of gigabit service to
cities like Kansas City and Austin. In Kansas City, the cable company responded with its own upgrade to gigabit
service; in Austin, it was the telephone company that upgraded competitively with its own ultra-high-speed
service.
12
corn petition-an d-gigabit-networks/
WASHINGTON POST: MUST TV STATION ADVERTISING DEPARTMENTS CONSULT WITH NEWS DEPARTMENTS
TO INVESTIGATE WHO'S FUNDING POLITICAL ADS?*
By Eugene Volokh, guest post for Washington Post's "The Volokh Conspiracy" blog
Federal rules require broadcasters to identify who is paying for an ad. A recent complaint by the Campaign
Legal Center, Common Cause, and the Sunlight Foundation claimed that one such ad, bought by NextGen
Climate Action Committee (and run to oppose Ken Cuccinelli, who was running for Virginia governor), was
actually created by Tom Steyer, "the sole donor to NextGen through November 2013," What's more, the
complaint reasoned,
WJLA employees and reporters actually knew that Steyer was planning a large political ad buy in the area on
climate issues, yet failed to disclose Steyer's name in the ad. WJLA's own report, which ran on August 5, 2013,
showed Steyer was about to inject a substantial amount of money into the Virginia governor's election. The
report went as follows:
The good news for Terry McAuliffe is that his campaign is about to get a major boost from California financier,
Tom Steyer - a billionaire environmentalist and vocal opponent of the Keystone Pipeline.
http ://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokhconspiracy/wp/2o14/og/o5/dotvstationadverjsingdps
have-to-consu lt-with-news-depts-to-investigate-possibletru e-funders-of-politjcal-ads/
Key senators unveiled draft legislation Friday aimed at reducing skyrocketing cable TV bills.
But the losers of the bill wouldn't be cable giants like Comcast, but rather broadcast networks like NBC and
Fox, as well as their local affiliates.
The Satellite Television Access and Viewer Rights Act from Sens. Jay Rockefeller and John Thune contains
several provisions aimed at reducing the leverage of the broadcast stations in negotiations with cable
providers.
The broadcast lobby is fighting a legislative effort that would allow cable customers to pick and choose which
over-the-air stations they want as part of their subscriptions.
13
Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W. Va.), chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, and Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.),
its ranking member, circulated their legislation on Friday. It would allow multichannel video customers to
purchase access to broadcast channels on an individual basis, at a price set by the station. In other words,
consumers would have the choice on whether to buy the stations, rather than be forced to take them as part
of basic cable packages. And of course, customers can always get rabbit ears and receive the stations for free.
While the rationale behind the legislation is to address rising TV bills, broadcasters immediately took aim.
Gordon Smith, CEO of the National Assn. of Broadcasters, said that the bill "proposes a broadcast a Ia carte
scheme that will lead to higher prices and less program diversity." He also objected to provisions that would
allow the FCC to have greater oversight of retransmission consent negotiations, which have led to some recent
high profile disputes between multichannel providers and broadcast networks.
ARS TECHNICA: CABLE COMPANIES WANT TO UNBUNDLE BROADCAST TV, AND BROADCASTERS ARE ANGRY
A Congressional proposal to let cable and satellite customers choose which broadcast TV channels they pay for
has led to a battle between small cable companies and broadcasters. While cable companies usually are
opponents of mandates to sell channels individually instead of in bundles, in this case they are fighting for a Ia
carte and against the broadcasters. The "Local Choice" proposal by US Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) and Sen.
John Thune (R-SD) affects local broadcast stations such as affiliates of NBC, CBS, ABC, and Fox.
A group called TVfreedom.org that represents local broadcasters and other organizations today criticized the
American Cable Association (ACA) for supporting Local Choice. "We believe 'Local Choice' represents a frontal
assault on free and local TV broadcasting," TVfreedom Public Affairs Director Robert Kenny wrote. "It would
tilt television's balance of power in favor of pay-TV providers at the expense of broadcasters invested in
localism. It would cost consumers more on their monthly bills, and do nothing to address shoddy pay-TV
service or the deceptive billing practices of cable and satellite TV providers."
http://arstechnica.com/business/2014/O9/cable-companies-want-to-unbundlebroadcasttvand. .
broadcasters-are-angry/
BLOOMBERG NEWS: DISH SAID TO DISCUSS T-MOBILE DEAL WITH DEUTSCHE TELEKOM*
Dish Network Corp. (DISH)'s Charlie Ergen recently contacted Deutsche Telekom AG (DTE) to say he is
14
interested in a future acquisition of its 1-Mobile US Inc. (TMUS) unit, people with knowledge of the matter
said.
Ergen, who made the approach after Deutsche Telekom's talks to combine T-Mobile with Sprint Corp. broke
down last month, hasn't made any formal offer, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the
conversations were private. He has told Deutsche Telekom - which also received an offer from France's Iliad
SA (ILD) - that he'd be open to the idea in the coming months, they said.
Dish, the second-largest U.S. satellite-TV provider, has told Deutsche Telekom, which owns about two-thirds of
T-Mobile, that it may be interested in a deal after a November auction for wireless airwaves is completed, said
the people. Dish hasn't formally hired a bank to advise it on a 1-Mobile takeover, and it's still unclear if the
Englewood, Colorado-based company is serious about a deal, the people said.
REUTERS: DISH SAID TO DISCUSS T-MOBILE DEAL WITH DEUTSCHE TELEKOM: BLOOMBERG
Reuters reports Dish Network Corp's chairman reached out to Deutsche Telekom to discuss acquiring the
German company's unit, 1-Mobile.
TECH TIMES: DISH WANTS TO DISCUSS T-MOBILE ACQUISITION WITH DEUTSCHE TELEKOM*
Dish recently contacted Deutsche Telekom and expressed their interest on the acquisition of 1-Mobile. The
deal may be realized once the auction for wireless airwaves in November is completed.
Dish is the second largest satellite-TV provider in the U.S. Its co-founder, Charlie Ergen, also controls the
company. At this point, the company hasn't made a formal offer yet on its acquisition plans. Currently, the
company is focused on the November spectrum auction.
Spearheaded by the Federal Communications Commission, the auction seeks bidders for AWS-3 spectrum.
Carriers such as Dish Network can use the spectrum to gain more network capacity and to enhance their
customer's music and online video streaming. The auction is speculated to be the largest following the 2008
sale which earned bids that totaled over $19 billion.
http://www.techtimes.com/articles/15028/2o14o9o7/dish-wants-to-discuss-t-mobjleacguisitionwith
deutsche-telekom-report.htm
15
The Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA), which represents manufacturers and suppliers of
communications networks, says the FCC should be able to preempt state limits on municipal broadband.
"[NJo statewide statutory barriers to municipal participation, whether explicit or de facto, should be erected.
The Commission can facilitate this by using its Section 706 statutory authority to preempt a state to the extent
that it finds that such regulatory barriers exist," it said.
That came in comments for the FCC's next Sec. 706 report on broadband deployment.
The North Carolina city of Wilson is joining with Chattanooga, Tenn., in an effort to void state laws that place
restrictions on municipal broadband. Wilson has filed a petition with the Federal Communications Commission
to pre-empt the state's three-year-old law requiring cities and towns seeking to start or expand cable TV and
broadband services to get a vote of the people before borrowing money for those operations.
The law prohibits cities from using revenues from noncommunications sources to pay broadband service
expenses and bans them from charging customers rates that are lower than the actual cost of providing the
service.
It also requires municipalities to pay counties the equivalent of what they would have to pay in property taxes
if the broadband service were operated by a private utility, and pay the state the amount a Utility would pay in
income, franchise, vehicle, motor fuel, or other similar taxes.
http://www.carolinaiournal.com/exclusives/djsplay exclusive.html?jd=11352
Last week, Amazon announced it is acquiring Twitch, an online streamer of video games and the garners who
play them. The billion dollar price tag reflects not Twitch's relatively modest revenues (said to be $75 million)
but its sudden and massive emergence as one of the top generators of traffic on the Internet.
The Twitch concept seems preposterous to many. Gamers sit at their PCs and consoles playing Titanfall,
Minecraft, League of Legends, or Madden 15 football; a Web cam broadcasts their play to the world; and -
this, to skeptics, is the bizarre part - millions of people watch! Such diversity of choice, however, was the
promise of a broadband life after television. Nothing so odd would ever have appeared in TV land because in a
narrowband, spectrum-scarce, broadcast world, every show and every advertisement had to appeal to a
predetermined audience.
Twitch is weird, and that's the point. But it's less weird than you might think. It now has 55 million unique
monthly viewers (consumers) and more than one million broadcasters (producers), generating 15 billion
minutes of content viewed a month. As we reported back in February, Twitch, just three years old, is by many
16
estimates the fourth largest single source of Internet traffic among companies, behind Netflix Netflix, Google
Google, and Apple Apple.
http ://www.forbes.com/sites/bretswanson/2014/o9/05/amazontwitchand:thetitleiithreattowebvideo/
NEW ORLEANS TIMES-PICAYUNE: WVUE'S SAINTS BROADCAST ON DIRECTV? NO WORD VET FROM THE
RAYCOM-DIRECTV NEGOTIATIONS
With hours to go before the New Orleans Saints' season-opening kickoff Sunday (Sept. 7), more than 100,000
local households didn't know if they'd be able to see the game. New Orleans Fox affiliate WVUE was dark on
DirecTV as it had been since Labor Day, and there had been no announcement of a settlement in negotiations
to restore the signal.
A broadcast retransmission renewal negotiation between DirecTV and Raycom Media, the Alabama-based
station group that manages WVUE for Tom Benson's Louisiana Media Co., caused more than 40 stations that
Raycom owns or operates in 18 states to go dark.
The negotiation, which reportedly began three months ago, is about the fees DirecTV will pay to carry
Raycom's broadcast stations, including WVUE, which entered into a shared-services agreement with Raycom
in late 2013, but is owned by Benson, who also owns the Saints.
DireclV and Raycom Media resolved their six-day retransmission consent spat on Sunday, just in time for the
afternoon slate of National Football League games.
Raycom went dark to DireclV customers in 37 markets on Sept.1, with the two sides at loggerheads mainly
over price. In a joint statement on Sunday, both sides said they had reached an agreement, terms of which
were not disclosed, in time for the 1p.m. kickoff of the opening weekend for the NFL.
DireclV had claimed that Raycom was demanding a doubling of the price it had previously charged for its 43
stations. In announcing the agreement, DirecTV, a big critic of rising sports and retransmission consent costs,
managed to get that point across.
VARIETY: DIRECTV, RAYCOM MEDIA BLACKOUT ENDS JUST IN TIME FOR NFL GAMES*
DirecTV and broadcaster Raycom Media ended a seven-day standoff that had blacked out Big Four network
affils in key markets such as Cincinnati, Cleveland and Charlotte, N.C.
17
The sides came to terms shortly before Sunday's 1 p.m. ET NFL kickoff time, which was not a surprise given the
amount of blowback from viewers if pigskin action such as the Cleveland Browns-Pittsburgh Steelers game
(pictured) had been disrupted.
Some 53 Raycom stations in 37 markets went dark on DirecTV on Sept. 1 after months of wrangling over a new
retransmission consent pact. Both sides accused the other of overreaching in the negotiations.
http://varietv.com/2014/tv/news/directvraycommediablackoutendsjustjn_timefornflgames
1201300204/
By Deadline Hollywood
Just in time for today's season-opening NFL games, Raycom Media and DirecTV settled their fee dispute with a
new deal that puts 43 broadcast stations back on the satcaster's service. The two sides did not disclose terms
of the deal. The deal was not
Just in time for today's season-opening NFL games, Raycom Media and DirecTV settled their fee dispute with a
new deal that puts 43 broadcast stations back on the satcaster's service. The two sides did not disclose terms
of the deal.
The deal was not entirely amicable, however. DirecTV took a shot at Raycom and other broadcasters pushing
for higher retransmission-fee deals by calling for changes in legislation that mandates local broadcast channels
be carried by pay-TV providers:
WAFF-TV HUNTSVILLE (AL): RAYCOM MEDIA REACHES AGREEMENT IN PRINCIPLE WITH DIRECTV
By WAFF-TV
Raycom Media has reached an agreement in principle with DirecTV. DirecTV viewers have been without
Raycom Media stations since September 1, 2014. DireclV subscribers should begin receiving their favorite
Raycom Media stations in approximately 2 hours.
Raycom Media promised to work around the clock and we have a deal in principle to get NFL football, local
news and weather plus network and local programming back on DirecTV. Raycom Media will be working over
the next few days to finalize the full agreement. We promise to keep you informed every step of the way.
Raycom Media President and CEO, Paul McTear stated, "We appreciate our viewers' patience. We apologize
for the inconvenience and thank them for their loyalty to their local stations throughout this process. We are
very pleased to be, once again, serving them on the DirecTV system and will keep them informed as we work
to finalize this agreement."
18
RICHMOND (VA) TIMES-DISPATCH: DIRECTV, RAYCOM REACH DEAL*
By Richmond Times-Dispatch
An agreement was announced Sunday restoring Raycom Media programming to DirecTV customers, including
WWBT-Channel 12 in Richmond.
Raycom Media stations stopped allowing access to DirecTV on Aug. 31 when the two companies couldn't work
out an agreement over retransmission fees.
WSFA-TV, along with more than 50 other Raycom Media stations, are back on DIRECTV.
Raycom and DIRECTV, which had been negotiating throughout the weekend, reached at agreement around
noon Sunday that would immediately end the blackout of Raycom channels on the satellite provider.
The Raycom stations had been off DIRECTV since Monday in a dispute over retransmission fees. Terms were
not disclosed.
http ://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/story/news/Iocal/atabama/2o14/og/o7/wsfaraycom..blackouend5_
directv/15259253/
Other independent networks that Comcast cites as supporting on its cable systems cost extra monthly fees
that subscribers have to pay, Gottsch said. These extra fees of $8 a month or more limit their popularity and
audience.
The fate of independent networks - a hot-button political topic in Washington for decades - has arisen as one
of many issues in the federal government's sweeping regulatory review of Comcast's proposed $45.2 billion
acquisition of Time Warner Cable Inc.
Independents can range from regional news channels to lifestyle and foreign-language networks. Some of
these independents warn that a combined Comcast/Tinie Warner Cable could act as a giant TV gatekeeper,
keeping them from a critical mass of viewers and protecting Comcast-owned cable channels.
Comcast's $45 billion takeover of Time Warner Cable will allow the combined company to collect an NSA-like
treasure trove of viewer data - giving it an unfair advantage over programmers, Discovery Communications
said on Friday.
A bigger Comcast - which gains control of subscribers in influential cities such as New York and Los Angeles as
part of its mega-merger, now before Washington regulators - could have an "unfair information advantage
over programmers in carriage negotiations and in the advertising realm by refusing to share set-top-box data
with programmers, the cable programmer argues.
Discovery, which made its feelings toward the merger public a day after meeting with Federal
Communications Commission officials, becomes the first major programming group to speak out publicly on
the controversial deal.
It's taken seven months, but the knives are finally flying toward Comcast cable colossus maker Brian Roberts.
Sources close to the deal between Comcast, the nation's No. 1 cable company, and No. 2 Time Warner Cable,
have begun to detail an array of concerns beyond the biggest gripe, so-called "most favored nation" clauses,
or guaranteed best price.
John Malone-backed Discovery Communications broke the silenceof the big programmers, raising fears that a
tie-up would pose a possible monopoly-like threat from advertising to unprecedented access to consumer
behaviors both online nd on TV.
http ://n/post.com/2O14/O9/O7/media-rivals-begin_to-citemegamergerrisks/
NEW YORK POST: ANY CURBS ON COMCAST ALLIANCE ARE TOUGH TO ENFORCE*
No matter what conditions regulators place on Comcast in order to approve its merger with Time Warner
Cable, they will be toothless, television industry insiders told The Post.
That's because the Federal Communications Commission is unable to enforce some of the conditions it sets
down, the critics claim.
Just look at the conditions Comcast was supposed to adhere to - but didn't - to gain approval of its
purchase of NBCUniversal, the critics maintain.
20
In advance of that meeting, King is promoting an "open letter to the industry" in which he ask broadcasters to
contact Pal and Doyle in support of his recommendations, to let them know "how imperative it is that these
measures be implemented on a fast approval track" to make AM competitive with FM.
The manufacturer has a keen interest in AM revitalization; its products are used in numerous facilities, and the
company markets itself as "the oldest continually operating AM antenna system provider in the U.S." Founder
Louis King resigned from RCA in 1949 as an AM high-power transmitter design engineer, obtained his PE
license and established a business as a regional broadcast consulting engineer that grew into Kintronic Labs.
(Read a company history.)
http://www.radioworjd.com/a rticle/kintronic-presses-fcc-on-am-standards/272246
RADIO AND MUSIC: KINTRONIC LABS CONCERNED ABOUT DECLINE OF AM RADIO IN US, SEEKS MEETING
WITH FCC*
Concerned about the declining position of AM Radio service in the United States, Kintronic Labs has scheduled
a meeting with Federal Communications Commission Commissioner Ajit Pai and Audio Media Chief Peter
Doyle on 23 September to address critical steps towards putting AM radio on a more competitive basis with
FM.
Reiterating that it had reflected this concern in its reply comments to the FCC NPRM Docket on the subject of
"AM Revitalization" issued on 31 October 2013, Kintronic Labs issued a public notice to all AM broadcasters in
the US yesterday in the interest of preserving this great national resource for local public media.
Kintronic President Tom F. King said, "We need full support and backing of you, the AM radio broadcasters, to
be able to communicate with Commissioner Pai and Mr. Doyle how imperative it is that these measures be
implemented on a fast approval track without further delay in order to put AM radio in a more competitive
position with FM radio. We request that you indicate your support simply by responding to the email to which
this letter was attached stating "I approve". Working together, we can restore AM radio to provide the high-
fidelity audio reception that the public listening audience demands."
http://www.radioandmusic.com/content/editorial/news/kintron ic-labs-concerned-about-decline-am-radio-us-
seeks-rn eeting-with-fcc
By Inside Radio
Founded in 1949, Kintronic Labs is the oldest continually operating AM antenna system provider in the U.S.
And while president Tom King still believes AM is a "great national resource," he says the declining position of
AM radio can't be ignored. So he's pushing the FCC to adopt standards that receiver manufacturers meet
minimum technical standards for both FM and AM radio - possibly as soon as January 2016.
In a letter to AM owners, King says he plans to meet with FCC commissioner Ajit Pai and Audio Division chief
Peter Doyle later this month to demonstrate a comparison of full-bandwidth AM and the typical AM receiver
that's now being integrated in most consumer electronics. King is pushing for a requirement to include an AM
23
antenna in both car and home receivers. He's also lobbying for other technology that would make AM
reception less compromised by atmospheric noise as well as fixes that would make radio receivers more
sensitive and selective to help listeners pick-up weak AM signals.
King is calling for AM broadcasters to contact Pai and Doyle to tell them how critical it is to put AM in a more
competitive position with FM. "Working together, we can restore AM radio to provide the high-fidelity audio
reception that the public listening audience demands," King writes. The future of AM is sure to be a hot topic
at this week's Radio Show where both Pai and Doyle are slated to address broadcasters.
http://www.insideradio.com/article.asp?id=2836397&spid=32061 #.VA2OXhFOWM8
NEW YORK POST: PIRATE RADIO STATIONS HIJACKING THE AIRWAVES IN BROOKLYN*
Brooklyn radio fans are fighting a pirate invasion - demanding a crackdown on illicit Caribbean, Hebrew and
shock-jock stations hijacking the airwaves.
Dozens of unlicensed shows operate in New York City on an average evening and the state is home to 25
percent of the nation's pirate transmissions, accordingto the FCC.
But many radio amateurs aren't forced to walk the plank. Instead, they find new hideaways for their
equipment as FCC budget cuts decrease enforcement.
Verizon will pay a $7.4 million fine for violating the privacy rights of about 2 million new customers by using
their personal information to market services to them.without first informing them of their right to opt out.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) said it is the largest fine ever involving an investigation into
privacy issues around the personal information of telephone users, though a relatively small hit for a company
that generated $31.5 billion in the second quarter.
According to the FCC, Verizon did not tell new customers-either through their first invoices or in welcome
letters sent to them-how they could opt out of having their personal information used in marketing efforts.
Along with the fine, Verizon also agreed to let customers know about their opt-out options in every bill they
send out over the next three years.
TOP TECH NEWS: FCC FINES VERIZON $7.4 MILLION FOR PRIVACY VIOLATIONS*
By Shirley Siluk
24
Verizon has been slapped with a $7.4 million fine by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission for failing
to give 2 million customers the choice of opting out of the company's marketing campaigns. It is the largest
fine the FCC has ever imposed for a privacy violation of phone customers' personal information.
In addition to paying the fine, Verizon must also include opt-out notices on every bill it sends to customers
over the next three years, and must put monitoring and testing systems in place to ensure customers are
receiving proper notices of their privacy rights.
"In today's increasingly connected world, it is critical that every phone company honor its duty to inform
customers of their privacy choices and then to respect those choices," said Travis LeBlanc, acting chief of the
FCC's Enforcement Bureau. "It is plainly unacceptable for any phone company to use its customers' personal
information for thousands of marketing campaigns without even giving them the choice to opt out."
KINSTON (NC) FREE PRESS: MEDIA GENERAL, WNCT WANT WRAL OUT OF LOCAL MARKETS*
In essence, WNCT and its corporate ownership took a look at WRAL and said, "This media market ain't big
enough for the both of us."
Attorneys for Media General, which owns Greenville CBS affiliate WNCT, filed a petition with the Federal
Communications Commission on Aug. 13 asking the regulatory agency to order Raleigh CBS affiliate WRAL off
the cable packages offered in Kinston and Greenville.
Specifically, the request is for the FCC to waive the "significantly viewed" exception that allows a second
affiliate of the same network - in this case, WRAL - into a market that would otherwise be the exclusive
dominion of the primary affiliate.
Members of the Office of Emergency Management joined the Kiwanis Club of Greater Parsippany during a
recent breakfast meeting to speak about Community Emergency Response Team (C.E.R.T,), Radio Amateur
Civil Emergency Services (R.A.C.E.S) and the role of Office of Emergency Management (O.E.M.) in the
community.
Parsippany OEM is a overseen by the Parsippany Police Department, Chief Paul Philipps is the coordinator of
OEM. Deputy Coordinators are Eric Hubner and Jay Geiger. The Office of Emergency Management is a local
version of Homeland Security & FEMA - the federal folks who deal with disasters - hurricanes, blizzards,
tornadoes, floods, terrorism etc. Each state, county and town has an OEM to help better protect the
community. Several members of OEM are equipped with pagers for responding to emergencies by request of
the Police Department. Some of the details isto provide cones and barricades for flooding, car accidents, road
closures, assisting Police Department in traffic control. Several members are part of the HazMat team which
25
responds to fuel spills and other hazardous situations, The OEM also monitors weather conditions and plans
for emergencies and helps recover after emergencies. They also backup other emergency services when
requested.
Parsippany R.A.C.E.S. role is to operate and maintain Amateur, Public Safety, and other communication
systems, to assist government officials in the protection of life and property during emergencies. Parsippany
R.A.C.E.S. has fifteen active members, four inactive members, all licensed by the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC). The role of R.A.C.E.S. is to provide communications when communications is lost or limited.
Parsippany R.A.C.E.S. meets on the first and third Monday of each month at 7:30 p.m. at the Parsippany OEM
office at the end of Waterview Boulevard. Parsippany R.A.C.E.S. is always looking for new members.
It looks as though there is a new and unannounced 7" that has started to make the rounds on news pages,
considering how it has just picked up FCC approval along the way. Sporting the model number NX74751, so far
there has been speculation that this could very well be a third generation Nexus 7 (2014) which might just
make an appearance in due time. As for the 'NX' prefix that is found on the model number, it does point to the
very real possibility of a Nexus device compared to other models. After all, in the FCC documentation itself,
Google has been listed as the brand name.
As for the rest of the hardware specifications, there is not much progress done on that front, since the only
thing listed in the FCC documentation happens to be a 2,48OmAh cell which will keep the slate powered.
Taking into consideration that the Nexus 7 (2013) happened to arrive with a 3,95OmAh battery right out of the
box, it does not sound right at all for a next generation Nexus 7 to take a step backward where battery life is
concerned. However, it must be noted that the second Nexus 7 tablet did feature a capacity cell that is a wee
bit smaller.
We do know that this will be a 7" tablet that has support for GSM 850/1900, WCDMA 850/1700/1900 and 4G
LTE bands 2, 4, 5,7 and 17. As for the other connectivity options, they will include dual-band Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
6.5, and NFC.
Broadband:
In an op-ed in the Post, University of Denver professor Ron Rizzuto writes that Colorado's broadband law
should not be revoked.
http://www.denverpost.com/opinion/ci 26474974/no-municipal-broadband-is-risky-proposition
26
FIERCE TELECOM: AT&T, BOX DRIVE BUSINESS WIRELESS/WIRELINE INTEGRATION WITH NEW CLOUD,
MOBILITY SOLUTION
AT&T (NYSE: T) has added another element to its cloud strategy by establishing a partnership with Box that it
says will enable it to deliver a variety of cloud-based storage and mobility solutions to a mix of small to
medium businesses (SMBs) and large enterprises.
Current and new AT&T business customers will be able to access the Box cloud using their existing VPN service
via the telco's NetBond technology. In addition to maintaining network privacy, NetBond allows businesses to
dynamically scale networking resources to accommodate fluctuation in their cloud usage.
The jointly developed cloud capabilities also play into the growing mobile nature of business users. By
integrating Box into AT&T Toggle, the telco's bring-your-own-device solution, businesses will be able to get
secure cloud-based collaboration, from any device.
solu/2014-09-05
FLORENCE (AL) TIMES DAILY: FRANKLIN COUNTY CONTINUES PUSH FOR BROADBAND
Katerina Cole wants to educate Franklin County residents on the effort to bring broadband Internet to the
area.
The broadband task force will have an amendment in the upcoming General Election asking that it be allowed
to be under the authority of the water board for the purpose of starting to write grants.
"A lot of times, people see amendments and vote no if they don't know what they're about," said Cole,
extension agent for Franklin County. "The water board is already a 501(c)3, and if we go underneath their
umbrella, we can start writing grants.
http://www.timesdaily.com/news/article 7d8642423642-11e4-ae48-OO1a4bcf6878.htm I
LOS ANGELES DAILY NEWS: NEW RULES COULD COST MORE FOR SPEEDY INTERNET SERVICE*
A major rule change in how companies provide Internet service to the public could fundamentally disrupt
online life as we know it, impacting the flow of information, business competition, freedom of speech and
everyone's pocketbook for years to come - but no one seems all that concerned.
Under the concept of net neutrality, now under review by the FCC, broadband Internet service providers
would have to provide service without discrimination based on content. They also couldn't impose elaborate
tiered pricing systems under which companies like Google or Netflix, for example - and therefore their
customers - would have to pay higher prices to get their content delivered at the fastest speeds. Others who
27
don't pay more would see delivery of their content deliberately slowed down.
If left alone, ISPs like Comcast or Verizon would be able to control speed on the Internet in the future, creating
fast lanes for those willing to pay for it.
CHATTANOOGA (TN) TIMES FREE PRESS: NETFLIX BACKS CHATTANOOGA'S BROADBAND EXPANSION WITH
FCC*
Streaming video giant Netflix has waded into the fracas over the right of public utilities to expand high-speed
broadband, throwing its considerable weight behind the efforts of Chattanooga and Wilson, N,C. to upend
restrictive laws in 20 states.
Chattanooga and Wilson are constrained by laws in Tennessee and North Carolina, respectively, which limit
the cities' ability to offer high-speed broadband beyond their current borders.
But in a filing with the FCC, Netflix said such laws, which are supported by cable and telecom monopolies,
"represent retrenchment and a move away from a pro-consumer policy of limitless bandwidth."
The Albemarle Board of Supervisors knows just about how many County citizens lack broadband Internet
service, but how best to address the issue remains to be seen.
During a work session Wednesday, the Board debated potential solutions to expanding broadband into the
County's rural areas, while recognizing that the Comprehensive Plan--the document that guides all planning
decisions-directs the Board to steer services toward growth areas, not the countryside.
The conversation was the result of a yearlong process in which the Board of Supervisors charged a Broadband
Task Force with evaluating the County's Internet needs.
Internet Policy:
In a Journal column, L. Gordon Crovitz writes that while the US has not given up control of Icann, authoritian
regimes are already attempting to fill the void.
28
http://online.wsj.com/a rticIes/l-gordon-crovitz-the-jnternet-powervacuumworsens14io124265
NEW YORK TIMES: TWO CITIES WITH BLAZING INTERNET SPEED SEARCH FOR A KILLER APP
A team of computer programmers here set out to learn how many cute kitten photos can be downloaded in
one second on their Internet network, one of the fastest in the country.
A trivial pursuit? Perhaps. But when your city has Internet capacity to spare and is not exactly a hotbed for
tech start-ups, figuring out what you are supposed to do with all that speed isa challenge.
http://www.nytimes.com/2O14/O9/O6/tech nology/two-cities-with-blazing-internet-speed-search-for-a-killer-
app. html
BLOOMBERG NEWS: GOOGLE TRAWLS EUROPE TO SEARCH FOR RIGHT-TO-BE FORGOTTEN ANSWERS
Google Inc. (GOOG) is hitting the road in a quest for answers to questions left hanging by European Union
judges who delivered an Internet "right to be forgotten."
The world's largest search provider, which opposes the EU Court of Justice May judgment that told it to
remove certain personal information from search results on request, plans public hearings in seven European
cities, kicking off in Madrid on Sept. 9. Google's critics say it's a self-serving attempt to steer a debate that
belongs to regulators and courts.
"The meetings are a cross between a lobbying exercise and a brazen publicity stunt," said Simon Davies, a
privacy advocate and an associate director of the enterprise unit at the London School of Economics. "While
there are two or three open minds on the company's advisory group that oversees the exercise, the process
appears to be fundamentally skewed against privacy and in favor of publication rights."
REUTERS: FACEBOOK READY TO SPEND BILLIONS TO BRING WHOLE WORLD ONLINE: ZUCKERBERG
Reuters reports Facebook is prepared to spend billions of dollars to bring the entire world online.
Consumers:
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As California goes, so goes the nation? Smartphone owners should certainly hope so, now that Gov. Jerry
Brown has signed a measure to help cut the rampant theft of iPhones, Samsung Galaxy 55's and other pricey
devices.
Beginning next July, the new law requires that all smartphones sold in California come with "kill switch"
technology to let the owner of a stolen phone remotely disable it and wipe its data, turning it into the
functional equivalent of a brick.
The law also requires that the kill switch be enabled by default when the user first sets up the phone. A user
could still opt out, but the automatic opt-in feature makes it likely that most users will leave the kill switch on.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2O14/Og/O7/sma rtphone-kill-switches-ihone-california-ctia-
editorials-debates/15257119/
Cybersecurity:
LOS ANGELES TIMES: SEN. DIANNE FEINSTEIN: CYBERSECURITY BILL STRIKES RIGHT BALANCE
The Times is right to call on Congress to pass cybersecurity legislation; improvements to cybersecurity are
greatly needed. I differ strongly, however, with your description of the cyber information sharing legislation
that was passed in July by the Senate Intelligence Committee by a 12-3 bipartisan vote. ("What is Congress
doing about cyberthreats and hackers?," Editorial, Sept. 3)
First, the legislation is purely voluntary. It provides legal authorization and liability protection to companies
that share cyber threat information with other companies or with the government. The editorial is wrong in
suggestingthe bill provides any authority for government surveillance or for the sharing of information for
purposes other than cybersecurity.
Second, the bill already includes numerous privacy protections. These include requirements that companies
strip out personally identifying information before sharing, that the government destroy information it
receives after a specified time and that the information sharing program is reviewed by the Privacy and Civil
Liberties Oversight Board, inspectors general and many others.
Lawmakers have been unable to pass legislation to deal with the stream of hacks at major stores and websites,
but the government may be able to do some good by helping out the insurance market.
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Analysts and brokers say the federal government should do more to help bolster the market for cybersecurity
insurance, which would lead to stronger networks and make people's data harder to steal.
Cybersecurity worries are growing following the theft of celebrities' nude photos, a hack at Home Depot that
may have exposed tens of millions of people's credit card information and a breach of HealthCare.gov .
Industry supporters hope the time is right for the country to take a new look at their offerings.
The latest threat of identity theft might not come from retail stores or big banks, but your doctor's office or
local hospital.
Criminals are stealing patient records to file fake insurance claims, obtain prescription medication, or sell
Social Security numbers. Just this summer, Chinese hackers seized the personal information of 4.5 million
patients at a Tennessee-based hospital network. And federal officials disclosed Thursday that an intruder
managed to install malicious software on HealthCare.gov, the government's health insurance marketplace.
VENTURE BEAT: OPINION: WHAT ENTERPRISES CAN LEARN FROM THE ICLOUD CELEBRITY PHOTO HACK
Following the recent discovery that the very personal photos of numerous female celebrities had been stolen
and posted online, Apple is rushing to strengthen security for its popular iCloud service. But, the question
remains whether or not these measures will be enough to protect users' private information - and whether
enterprise users should be using these services at all.
However, a key positive takeaway is that the same techniques that have been used for years to target
enterprises and high profile targets like CEOs, from social engineering to phishing, feature prominently in this
incident. That means that key vendors like Apple are likely to improve defenses against those attacks, which
will benefit enterprises and consumers alike. How safe are consumer cloud services?
By and large, consumer cloud services are quite secure for those of us who are not high profile celebrities.
When using these services, users employing strong passwords and/or two-factor authentication should feel
confident that their documents and photos are safe from public view and access.
http ://venturebeat.com/2014/09/06/what-enterprises-can-learn-from-the-icloud-celebrity-photo-hack/
Wireless:
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FIERCE WIRELESS: SPRINT ADDS 15 RURAL CARRIERS TO ITE ROAMING PROGRAM
Sprint (NYSE: S) added 15 new rural wireless carrier partners to its LIE roaming program, growing the size of
its LTE roaming footprint by more than 4 million POPs.
The new partners build on Sprint's announcement in June of 12 rural LTE roaming partners, which included a
previously announced deal with nTelos Wireless. Those agreements covered 34 million POPs in 23 states.
Including the new agreements, the program now includes 27 carriers, and extends coverage over 565,000
square miles in 27 states and a population of more than 38 million people.
Sprint is using its Rural Roaming Preferred Provider program to expand its LIE footprint, which lags those of
Verizon Wireless (NYSE: VZ) and AT&T Mobility (NYSE: T). Verizon says it covers 306 million POPs with LTE and
AT&T just reported that its network covers 300 million POPs. Sprint's LTE footprint currently covers 254 million
POPs, but because it does not have as much low-band spectrum as Verizon and AT&T its LIE network reach
has been limited. All of the agreements under Sprint's program include reciprocal roaming agreements, letting
Sprint customers roam onto the rural carriers' networks and vice versa.
GIGAOM: SPRINT ADDS 15 NEW REGIONAL CARRIERS TO ITS LIE RURAL ROAMING PROGRAM
Sprint still has to fill in some big holes in its urban LTE footprint - San Francisco being the most glaring
example - but it's making progress bringing 4G coverage to many rural regions of the country. On Friday Sprint
announced roaming deals with 15 new regional carriers serving customers in 12 states.
The carriers are all part of Sprint's Rural Roaming Preferred Program, in which Sprint not only agrees to share
its networks with its roaming partners but also leases them spectrum so they can build LIE networks of their
own. Sprint has also agreed to make its own phones interoperable on these carriers' airwaves, which is key to
ensuring customers can move freely between networks.
In all Sprint has 27 carriers in the program. Combined, they operate in 27 states and cover a population of 38
million.
FIERCE WIRELESSTECH: MILITARY, PUBLIC-SAFETY LIE SMALL CELL REVENUES TO REACH $350M BY 2020,
SAYS REPORT
Due to their portability and the availabilityof mobile core solutions that provide communications capabilities
when there is no access to traditional infrastructure, small cells are increasingly being seen as a key enabler
for bringing LTE to military and public-safety verticals, says SNS Research. The company predicts these entities
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will spend $350 million by 2020 on LTE small cell infrastructure, reflecting a compound annual growth rate
(CAGR) of 45 percent between 2014 and 2020. "LTE is now viewed as the de-facto standard for future military
and public-safety networks" because it offers lower total cost of ownership (TCO) and the ability to support
data intensive applications such as mobile video and situational awareness, SNS noted. In the United States,
the First Responder Network Authority (FirstNet) is laying out the path for a nationwide public-safety
broadband network (NPSBN) using LTE in the 700 MHz spectrum band. For more, see this SNS release.
GIGAOM: DATA PLANS ARE THE BIGGEST OBSTACLE TO MOBILE VIDEO'S FUTURE
Consumers are increasingly turning to their phones to stream video, but there's one major obstacle that still
holds many back from watching video on mobile devices while outside of their own home: data plans. That's
one of the findings in the most recent Ericsson ConsumerLab TV and Media report.
Almost half of consumers (46 percent) believe the data cost for accessing video on mobile devices is too high,
according to the report, which Ericsson released this week. Interestingly enough, there is a close second
reason: 45 percent of consumers think that the cost of content is too high. Still, smartphones are on the rise as
a video consumption device, while desktop PCs are declining.
Overall, video consumption is growing and is starting to become as important as linear TV, at least with regard
to the number of times people access each medium.
Privacy:
Mark Zuckerberg said in 2010 that privacy was no longer a "social norm." But four years later, the pendulum
might be ready to swing the other way.
The second generation of digital citizens -teenagers and millennials, who have spent most, if not all, of their
lives online - appear to be more likely to embrace the tools of privacy and protect their personal information.
Disappearing-message apps like Snapchat and Cyber Dust have been embraced by young people who aren't
eager to leave too much of a digital footprint. Video apps like Vine and Instagram let you create an edited
version of your world instead of uploading all your personal details.
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/09/07/rethinki ng-privacy-on-the-internet/
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By Julian Hattem, The Hill
Dozens of civil liberties groups are putting pressure on the Senate to move forward with a bill to rein in the
National Security Agency.
More than 40 groups wrote a letter to Senate leaders on Thursday praising the "important first step" that
would be taken if Sen. Patrick Leahy's (D-Vt.) USA Freedom Act were passed in coming months, even while
noting that "further reform will still be needed."
The bill, which Leahy released earlier this summer after months of negotiations with lawmakers and the
Obama administration, would end the NSA's bulk collection of Americans' phone records - the most
controversial program revealed by Edward Snowden last year.
Health Technology:
FIERCE MEDICAL DEVICES: MED TECH STARTUPS FLOURISH AS ACCESS TO IT GETS CHEAPER, EASIER
Medical device startups are experiencing a boom due to easy access to cheap tools and global networking
available through today's ever-growing access to information technology. Med tech is successfully navigating
the plethora of alternative prototype capabilities, such as 3-D printing, that were not available in previous
decades. Startups producing devices such as Babybe, a maternal heartbeat-conveying pad given to comfort
babies in the NICU, are able to move from ideas to actual products with very limited supplies and funds by
using the most cost-effective parts from across the globe.
The healthcare industry has been slow to adopt cloud technology due to security, compliance and cost issues,
among others, according to a recent report from iHT2.
In the paper, "Answers to Healthcare Leaders' Cloud Questions," iHT2 looks at barriers that prevent cloud
adoption.
Here's what the paper says about three cloud issues facing providers:
The big question when it comes to healthcare, according to Stofko, is: "Can we make personal care seamless,
simple and inexpensive?" He goes on to say that the best way to do that is through "personal" health
management tools that can manage individuals' health in a passive way or a way that results from tasks
already in place.
Stofko points to his own framework for a "Personalized Medicine Model" to guide self-monitoring and care.
The framework includes four interconnected areas: Genetic, lifestyle, interventional and monitoring.
Coordinated care and mHealth technologies are key to reducing disparities in care for vulnerable populations,
according to an article at Health Affairs.
Research on improving care tends to be narrowly focused and take too long to bring change at the clinical
level--if it ever does, writes Joseph West, an epidemiologist and statistician, who is senior partner at the
consultancy NextLevel Advisory Group and chief population health officer for NextLevel Health, a Medicaid
managed-care entity.
The patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model, along with better data capture and analysis, offers the
potential to bring an array of stakeholders together to improve care based on data compiled in real time.
FIERCEEMR: WHY CONGRESS MUST BE CAUTIOUS ABOUT SPENDING MORE FOR HIT INTEROPERABILITY
Federal legislators should exercise caution in doling out more money for health IT interoperability efforts, as
there is no guarantee that doing so will actually improve health data exchange, writes John Graham, a senior
fellow at the National Center for Policy Analysis and the Independent Institute.
Graham, in a commentary for Forbes, called interoperability a "unicorn," saying that despite billions of dollars
sunk into the Meaningful Use incentive program, data exchange between hospitals on disparate EHR systems
remains difficult, if not impossible.
"[E]xchanging data with competitors is fundamentally against the self-interest of the part which created the
data," Graham said. "Nobody would expect the U.S. Department of Transportation to set up a fund to
incentivize car-makers to exchange data with each other, or the U.S. Department of Agriculture to set up a
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fund to incentivize grocery stores to exchange data with each other."
VENTURE BEAT: IF APPLE'S SMARTWATCH SUCCEEDS, HERE'S HOW IT WILL CHANGE HEALTH
Apple may very well transform our lives again with a new smartwatch, just like it did in 2007 with the launch
of the iPhone. The smartwatch market has been trying to make health- and fitness-tracking mainstream, but
lackluster technology has so far held back its vast potential.
Here's what the smartwatch could do for us if Apple hits lightning twice and transforms the health market
http://venturebeatcom/2014/09/07/if-apples-smartwatch-succeeds-heres-how-it-will-change-health/
For many New Mexicans and others living in rural parts of the world, a visit to the doctor can be a daunting
experience requiring expensive travel over vast distances.
But advancements in technology could help change that, revolutionizing not only a routine doctor visit but the
entire practice of medicine around the world.
Dale Alverson, medical director of medical director of the Center for Telehealth and Cybermedicine Research
at UNM, will discuss the future of "telehealth" and its impact on global medical practices Sunday, Sept. 14, as
part of the Albuquerque International Association's six-part lecture series on global health trends.
http://www.abgjournal.com/458228/news/telehealth-could-revolutionize-global-medical-treatment.html
Telemedicine - or telehealth, as it's broadly called - and emerging mobile health technologies are progressing,
despite challenges related to logistics, regulations and reimbursement. Telehealth is also reshaping the health
care delivery landscape through integration with clinical practice, largely because of IT advances and
innovation.
The drivers and contextual forces propelling the shift, on one hand, are the usual suspects:
MHEALTH NEWS: MHEALTH MASTERS: HARRY GREENSPUN ON THE PROMISE OF APPLIED ANALYTICS
To say Harry Greenspun, MD, is well versed in mobile healthcare and technology is to put it mildly.
Greenspun, senior advisor at Deloitte's Center for Health Solutions, is also chairman of the HIMSS Government
Relations Roundtable and a member of the new HIMSS mHealth Community, and has advised the Obama
Administration on the importance of healthcare IT investment.
Prior to joining Deloitte, he served as chief medical officer for Dell and Northrup Grumman. He's a co-author
of "Reengineering Health Care: A Manifesto for Radically Rethinking Health Care Delivery," and serves on the
World Economic Forum's Global Agenda Council on Digital Health, WellPoint External Advisory Council on
Health Inequities and the advisory boards for Georgetown University, the Global Medical Microtechnology
Association (GM MA) and Wireless-Life Sciences Alliance (WLSA).
http://www.mhealthnews.com/news/mhealth-masters-harry-gi-eenspun-promise-applied-analytics
Social Media:
ARS TECHNICA: FACEBOOK'S "PRIVACY CHECKUP" AIMS TO MAKE USERS COMFORTABLE AGAIN
Facebook has installed a "privacy checkup" pop-up on its Web interface intended to help prevent users from
sharing information that they don't intend to, according to a press release issued on Thursday. The feature
walks users through a set of steps to let them see which groups of friends see which pieces of profile
information, as well as information from third-party apps.
The feature first asks users to adjust their default privacy setting on posts and then to look through their
Facebook-connected apps to adjust the privacy settings in each one or to revoke access. The last step pulls up
the privacy settings of each profile element into one box with the same drop-down menu for tweaks.
Facebook's previous best effort at privacy transparency was its View As tool, which allows users to see their
profile as another particular user might see it. While this helped with profile design, it didn't address app
information or posting privacy status. Facebook will be prompting users in waves over the coming weeks to
use the checkup, but completing it won't be required.
37
Twitter has had plenty of challenges. Convincing media companies to work with it hasn't been one of them.
So what's on Katie Jacobs Stanton's to-do-list, now that she's Twitter's new VP of Global Media? Do more, she
says: Convince more partners, in more countries, to use Twitter as a distribution platform - while convincing
them that Twitter won't end up competing with them.
A four-year Twitter veteran, Stanton previously ran Twitter's international strategy from Paris. She was
promoted in early July following an executive shakeup that resulted in the departure of COO AU Rowghani and
previous media head Chloe Sladden. Stanton was already handling Twitter partnerships overseas, but her new
role means U.S. partnerships now fall onto her plate, too.
TECHCRUNCH: REDDIT TAKES DOWN GROUPS HOSTING CELEBRITY NUDES, WALKS A BLURRED LINE ON FREE
SPEECH
Reddit did two things last night that, on the surface, seemed pretty contradictory. It published a post, by CEO
Yishan Wong offering an explanation for why the site does not generally take down "morally objectionable or
otherwise inappropriate" subreddits. At around the same time, Reddit took down /r/TheFappening and
related subreddits, where many of the images from the celebrity photo hack were posted.
The post itself has been updated to acknowledge that this was a little weird, explaining the situation like so:
Those two events occurring together have created great confusion. That is: we put up a blog post explaining
why we don't ban things for reason X (which some people want us to, but we will not), but at the same time
behavior in a subreddit started violating reason Y (a pre-existing and valid rule for which we do ban things) and
we banned it, resulting in much confusion.
VENTURE BEAT: REDDIT BANS SUB-COMMUNITY RESPONSIBLE FOR SPREADING LEAKED CELEBRITY PHOTOS
Community news sharing site Reddit yesterday decided to ban a sub-community (called a subreddit)
responsible for the sharing of leaked, nude celebrity photos.
The subreddit in question was called "The Fappening," and gained notoriety after hackers released a trove of
nude and revealing celebrity photos from the likes of Jennifer Lawrence, Aubrey Plaza, Kate Upton, Kate
Bosworth, Kirsten Dunst, and several others. Reddit moderators did their best to ban any links shared within
the subreddit in the week since the photos first leaked. Reddit, however, had seen enough and chose to take
action by eliminating the entire community itself.
Reddit's CEO Vishan Wong said although the company moved to ban The Fappening, it was unlikely to change
its practices to further prevent this type of behavior in the future. This was mostly because the current
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restrictions and rules Reddit put into place are sufficient, he said - albeit a bit late when it comes to
enforcement.
TV is increasingly for the old, and the Internet is for the young, according to new research by media analyst
Michael Nathanson of Moffett Nathanson Research.
The median age of a broadcast or cable television viewer during the 2013-2014 TV season was 44.4 years old,
a 6 percent increase in age from fouryears earlier. Audiences for the major broadcast network shows are
much older and aging even faster, with a median age of 53.9 years old, up 7 percent from four years ago.
These television viewers are aging faster than the U.S. population, Nathanson points out. The median age in
the U.S. was 37.2, according to the U.S. Census, a figure that increased 1,9 percent over a decade. So to put
that in context of television viewing, he said TV audiences aged 5 percent faster than the average American.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/n ews/business/wp/2014/09/05/tv-is-increasingly-for-old-people/
WASHINGTON POST: HOW DID VICE MEDIA JUST GET HALF A BILLION DOLLARS IN NEW FUNDING? ONE OF
THE INVESTORS EXPLAINS.
All summer there seemed to be a race to get a piece of Vice Media, with companies such as Fox, Disney and
Time Warner all reportedly wooing the growing media powerhouse that began as a punk magazine. On
Thursday, Vice announced that Technology Crossover Ventures and A+E Networks had agreed to a combined
$500 million investment to grow the site's news operations.
Sites like Vice and Buzzfeed are particularly good at attracting a young digital audience. Buzzfeed, too, recently
received an infusion of funding with a $25 million investment from the venture capital firm Andreesen
Horowitz.
We spoke on Thursday to Vice's newest investors at Technology Crossover Ventures about their $250 million
stake in Brooklyn-based Vice. The following is an edited version of an interview with Woody Marshall, a
general parter of the Palo Alto-based TCV, which has also invested in Netflix and Facebook:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/busin ess/wp/2014/09/05/how-did-vice-media-iust-get-half-a-billion-
dollars-in-new-funding-one-of-the-investors-explains!
39
By Associated Press
An attorney for BellSouth has asked a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit claiming the company owes millions in
unpaid fees to ten 911 districts in Tennessee.
The Chattanooga Times Free Press (http://bit.ly/lxc7RO5) reports attorney Scott Angstreich last week asked
U.S. District Judge Curtis Collier to rule against Hamilton County 911 and the nine other districts
The lawsuit claims BellSouth didn't turn over 911 fees it owed the districts, intentionally lying to the
emergency services providers to help its bottom line.
A. No: TiVo blocks video output entirely on its iOS apps, even though others have no problem sending video to
a larger screen via wireless AirPlay mirroring to Apple TVs or over an HDMI cable to any old TV. And TiVo's
upcoming Android app won't have that option either
• That was a conscious decision by TiVo, but the digital-video-recorder company wasn't acting on its own.
International:
LOS ANGELES TIMES: CHINA TO KEEP CLOSER EYE ON U.S. TV SHOWS STREAMED ON INTERNET
American TV shows offered by Chinese Internet companies will likely face tougher scrutiny next year after
China's media watchdog announced plans Friday to step up enforcement of licensing regulations and
emphasized the need for wholesome content.
China's State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television said foreign TV shows failing to
obtain a license will be taken offline starting April 1, 2015.
"Qualified Internet video content providers are encouraged to introduce healthy and well-produced foreign TV
shows that promote positive values such as being truthful, kind and delightful," the agency said in a statement
on its website (link in Chinese).
http://www.latimes.com/entertain ment/envelope/cotown/la-et-ct-china-tv-shows-20140905-story.htm I
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By Louise Watt, Associated Press
Every foreign TV show and movie shown on Chinese online streaming sites will have to be approved by
authorities or else go offline early next year, the country's broadcast regulator said Friday, tightening control
over the online industry.
Licensed foreign content also cannot be greater than 30 percent of the total domestic content licensed in the
previous year, according to an executive at one of the sites, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he
was not authorized to speak directly to the media.
The announcement on the website of the State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television
only addressed the approval requirement for foreign content and did not mention the 30 percent limit.
http://www.chron.com/entertainm ent/television/article/China-video-sites-need-foreign-content-appr-oved-
5735592.php
BLOOMBERG NEWS: VODAFONE ITALIAN FIBER LINES TO REACH 7 MILLION HOMES BY 2017
Vodafone Group Plc (VOD), seeking to return its Italian business to growth, will expand its high-speed fiber-
optic network there to make service available to 7 million homes in the next two-and-a-half years.
The two-year investment plan of 3.6 billion euros ($4.7 billion) is "going well and fast," the unit's chief
executive officer, Aldo Bisio, said yesterday in an interview at the Ambrosetti forum in Cernobbio, Italy.
Bisio's fiber expansion is part of a 19 billion-pound ($31 billion) global investment program to upgrade
Vodafone's mobile networks to faster fourth-generation wireless technology and add broadband Web service.
Bisio said the investment in Internet should give a competitive advantage to the Italian unit, Vodafone's worst
performer last quarter with a 16 percent decline in service revenue from a year earlier.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-05/vodafone-italian-fiber-Iines-to-reach-7-million-houses-by-
2017.html
BLOOMBERG NEWS: SOUTH AFRICA MOBILE-PHONE RATE CUTS EASED AFTER OBJECTIONS
South Africa's communications regulator will reduce the cost of terminating calls on mobile networks at a
slower rate than previously announced after opposition from the biggest operators, Vodacom Group Ltd.
(VOD) said.
The amount mobile-phone companies pay each other to end calls onanother network will fall 20 percent to
16 rand cents ($0.01) from March 2015, Johannesburg-based Vodacom said in an e-mailed response to
questions yesterday, That compares with 15 cents announced in January. The move to cut rates is designed to
help smaller companies compete with Vodacom and MTN Group Ltd. (MTN), which dominate the South
African market.
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"We're studying the announcement and will be providing feedback in due course," Vodacom spokesman
Richard Boorman said by e-mail yesterday. MIN is also examining the proposals, spokesman Chris Maroleng
said by e-mail today. Paseka Maleka, a spokesman for the Independent Communications Authority of South
Africa, wasn't available for comment. The mobile-phone companies have 10 days to respond to the new
proposals, according to Vodacom.
FIERCE WIRELESS: DEUTSCHE TELEKOM STEPS UP FMC STRATEGY WITH "MAGENTAEINS" LAUNCH
Deutsche Telekom announced a raft of new service bundles and network developments at the IFA consumer
electronics show on Friday, as the German incumbent firmly placed its bets on the convergence of fixed and
mobile services, throwing down the gauntlet to rival operators in the process.
The operator unveiled the "MagentaElNS" portfolio of fixed and mobile services, offering fixed, TV and mobile
services within a single plan, with small, medium and large options available. The name of the service portfolio
also plays on the traditional "magenta" colour of Deutsche Telekom's well-known "T" brand combined with
four dots.
"Telekom's new packages mark its entry into a new growth market," the company said in a release. "Some 22
million fixed network connections and 40 million mobile customers show the market potential forDeutsche
Telekom as an integrated telecommunications provider."
http ://www.fiercewireless.com/europe/story/deutsche-telekom-steps-fmc-strategy-magentaejns-
Ia unch/2014-09-05
ADWEEK: CANADA'S PROPOSAL TO DEREGULATE CABLE TV MARKET WORRIES U.S. CONTENT PROVIDERS
U.S. content providers are warily eyeing efforts by Canadian regulators to unbundle Canada's cable TV
industry, a move that could eat into the profits of companies like Disney and Comcast that service the
Canadian market.
In Ottawa next week, Disney will be alongside Canada's largest cable operators to lobby against a proposal by
the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) that would essentially give
consumers the ultimate power to decide what they want to view and pay for on cable.
Bundling is the heart and soul of the cable TV industry, which is why the CRTC plan is being watched very
closely by some big players in Canada and the U.S. If the regulations take hold, Canada would be among the
first countries to institute a pick-and-pay cable TV market, which threatens the current cable TV pricing
structure.
http ://www.adweek.corn/news/televjsion/canada-may-unbundle-cable-tv-subscriptjons-15991j.
42
C-SPAN: The Communicators:
GUEST: FORMER FCC COMMISSIONERS MICHAEL COPPS AND ROBERT MCDOWELL.* Please click here.
copyright 2014 by Bulletin Intelligence, LLC Reproduction or redistribution without permission prohibited.
Editorial content is drawn from thousands of newspapers, national magazines, national and local television
programs, radio broadcasts, and additional forms of open source data. Sources for Bulletin Intelligence article
impression numbers include Scarborough, GfK MRI, comScore, Nielsen, and the Audit Bureau of Circulation.
The FCC Daily News Briefing is published five days a week by Bulletin Intelligence, which creates custom
briefings for government and corporate leaders. We can be found on the Web at Bulletinlntelligence.com, or
called at (703) 483-6100.
43
From: FCC Chief Information Officer
To: EVERYONE-EX
Subject: *** Internal Awareness Message *** Possible Cyber Disruptions Linked to the Commission’s Open Internet
Discussions
Date: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 5:50:19 PM
Attachments: Cyber Awareness Message.doc
While DDOSs do not damage infrastructure, they send volumes of server requests to flood
the systems so the FCC's servers cannot distinguish between legitimate requests vs.
illegitimate requests – with the intent on slowing down the response time to access
information.
ECFS is an 18-year old system that FCC IT team has done their best to scale, short of a
complete rewrite, for the anticipated volume of traffic. If a surge of comments are filed all
at once in ECFS, the system may slow down for everyone. Like a crowded tunnel, some
users will get through but not all. We recommend people consider emailing their comments
to [email protected]
The FCC's Open Internet email address may be targeted for a similar flood of mailings or
electronic filing that include malicious cyber attachments. Internal FCC internet access may
be slower than normal. The FCC’s public-facing databases, website, and external web-facing
applications may appear unavailable to a majority of users.
FCC IT’s Network Security Operations Center (NSOC) will be continuously monitoring the
networks and websites, IP addresses, and scanning email and attachments – and will be
proactively taking heightened security measures.
For your part – we ask that everyone at FCC be
extremely cautious about clicking on any email
attachments received, and do not to click on, or open
attachments from, unknown senders as attackers may
use them to deliver “0-day” malicious code to attack
FCC’s networks.
FCC IT leadership can be reached at [email protected]. Any internal FCC IT cyber
security-related questions should be directed to [email protected] and general IT questions to
[email protected].
With highest regards,
David A. Bray, PhD, MSPH
Chief Information Officer
Federal Communications Commission
+1 202.418.2020 & @fcc_cio
Federal Communications Commission
*** Internal Awareness Message ***
Possible Cyber Disruptions Linked to the Commission’s Open Internet Discussions
Dear FCC Colleagues,
The Open Internet comment period closes on Monday, 15 September. Given this is highly publicized
topic ‐‐ we believe there is a high probability that the FCC’s public website, Electronic Comment Filing
System, or other public‐facing databases may experience cyber disruptions. Based on external press
reports, these activities might include Distributed Denial of Service (DDOS) attacks to either our website
or public‐facing databases.
While DDOSs do not damage infrastructure, they send volumes of server requests to flood the
systems so the FCC's servers cannot distinguish between legitimate requests vs. illegitimate
requests – with the intent on slowing down the response time to access information.
ECFS is an 18‐year old system that FCC IT team has done their best to scale, short of a complete
rewrite, for the anticipated volume of traffic. If a surge of comments are filed all at once in ECFS,
the system may slow down for everyone. Like a crowded tunnel, some users will get through but
not all. We recommend people consider emailing their comments to [email protected]
The FCC's Open Internet email address may be targeted for a similar flood of mailings or
electronic filing that include malicious cyber attachments. Internal FCC internet access may be
slower than normal. The FCC’s public‐facing databases, website, and external web‐facing
applications may appear unavailable to a majority of users.
FCC IT’s Network Security Operations Center (NSOC) will be continuously monitoring the networks and
websites, IP addresses, and scanning email and attachments – and will be proactively taking heightened
security measures.
For your part – we ask that everyone at FCC be extremely cautious about clicking on
any email attachments received, and do not to click on, or open attachments from,
unknown senders as attackers may use them to deliver “0‐day” malicious code to
attack FCC’s networks.
FCC IT leadership can be reached at [email protected]. Any internal FCC IT cyber security‐related
questions should be directed to [email protected] and general IT questions to Service‐[email protected].
With highest regards,
David A. Bray, PhD, MSPH
Chief Information Officer
Federal Communications Commission
+1 202.418.2020 & @fcc_cio
From: Kim Hart
To: Gigi Sohn
Subject: Fw:
Date: Friday, September 19, 2014 4:27:52 PM
On Wednesday, the day of the Internet slowdown, the FCC communications team had provided
reporters who asked with the latest numbers of comments received as of that evening (1.5 million) as
we have done throughout the OI comment period. On Thursday morning, the team received the
latest update on how many additional comments had come in overnight in the ECFS
system and OI mailbox and provided the updated number (1.7 million) to the handful
of reporters who asked.
We were informed that activist groups were encountering slowness in ECFS when
trying to submit comments. They were in touch with the FCC IT team to find another
way to send in comments collected. When we realized the scope of the comments
they were attempting to submit to us, we immediately stopped providing the number
of comments received in ECFS -- although technically correct -- and clarified that we
did not have an official count from the Day of Action in a tweet:
"Due to high number of comments received in last 24 hours, we do not yet have an official comment
count. Will provide ASAP."
Three hours later, we posted a blog that provided the CSV option for submitting bulk
comments and again clarified that we were still receiving large numbers of
comments, and did not have a final count:
http://www.fcc.gov/blog/additional-option-filing-open-internet-comments
"The Commission is working to ensure that all comments are processed and that we
have a full accounting of the number received as soon as possible. Most important,
all of these comments will be considered as part of the rule making process"
Our IT team turned off conversion of comments processed into ECFS in order to
devote all resources to receiving the comments and catching up over the
weekend. On Monday, our systems had largely caught up and we saw the drastic increase in the
comments over the past three days. We publicly released that we had passed the 3 million
mark Monday afternoon making clear we had received more than 1.5 million comments since
Wednesday -- with several hours still to go before the deadline. On Tuesday, we released the total
number of comments received as of the midnight deadline of September 15—3.7 million comments.
From: Diane Cornell
To: Gigi Sohn
Subject: FW: Comment due through 9/19
Date: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 6:43:53 PM
Not quite sure why this fire drill was necessary, if we’re just going to do a global extension of time
for all filings. Do you follow?
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 6:28 PM
To: Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Sara Morris; Maria
Kirby; Renee Gregory; Patrick Halley; Ruth Milkman; Philip Verveer; Andrew Woelfling; Eric Feigenbaum
Cc: Diane Cornell; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield
Subject: Comment due through 9/19
All,
Below is the compiled list of comment deadlines we received from the bureaus through next Friday.
Thanks to Diane and Bartees for the help in pulling this together.
Shannon
Wednesday, September 10
Reply Comments are due:
Wireline Competition Bureau: WCB Seeks to Refresh the Record in the 2010 Proceeding on Title II
and Other Potential Legal Frameworks for Broadband Internet Access Service
Docket Number: DA-14-748
Thursday, September 11
Comments Due:
International Bureau: Request for Coordination of Canadian Earth Stations with USA Terrestrial Fixed
Stations
Wireline Competition Bureau: WCB Seeks Comment On Rural LECS Petition For Limited And
Expedited Waiver of the Commission's Intercarrier Compensation Revenue Recovery Rules For Rate-
Of-Return Carriers
Docket Number: DA-14-1175
Wireline Competition Bureau: WCB Seeks Comment On Wilkes Telephone Membership Corporation
Petition For Limited And Expedited Waiver Of The Commission's Intercarrier Compensation Revenue
Recovery Rules For Rate-Of-Return Carriers
Docket Number: DA-14-1176
Wireline Competition Bureau: Domestic Section 214 Application Filed For The Acquisition Of Assets
Of G4 Communications Corporation And G4 Telecom NH, Inc. By Segtel, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1250
Wireline Competition bureau: Domestic section 214 Application filed for the Acquisition of assets of
AMI Communications, Inc. By BCN Telecom, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1252
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: CGB Seeks Comment On Its Tentative Findings About
The Accessibility Of Communications Technologies For The 2014 Biennial Report Under The Twenty-
First Century Communications And Video Accessibility Act
Docket Number: DA-14-1255
Reply Comments Due:
Wireline Competition Bureau: Domestic Section 214 Application Filed for the Transfer of Control of
World Communications, Inc. to Integra Telecom Holdings, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1175
Friday, September 12
Comments Due:
International Bureau: FCC Seeks Comment on Recommendations Approved by the Advisory
Committee for the 2015 World Radio Communication Conference
Docket Number: DA-14-1248
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau Seeks
Comment on Petition Concerning the Commission's Rule on Opt-Out Notices on Fax Advertisements
Docket Number: DA-14-1259
Monday, September 15
Comments Due:
Wireline Competition bureau: E-Rate FNPRN
Reply Comments Due:
Wireline Competition Bureau: Protecting and Promoting the Open Internet
Wireline Competition Bureau: E-Rate FNPRN
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: Santander (Consumer consent for robocalls) Public
Notice
Docket Number: DA 14-1122
Tuesday, September 16
Comments Due:
Media Bureau: AT&T/DirecTV
Docket Number: MB 14-90
Wednesday, September 17
N/A
Friday, September 18
Reply Comments Due:
Wireline Competition Bureau: 10th NOI Broadband Progress Report
WC Docket Number: 14-126
Wireline Competition Bureau: Domestic Section 214 Application Filed For The Acquisition Of Assets
Of G4 Communications Corporation And G4 Telecom NH, Inc. By Segtel, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1250
Wireline Competition bureau: Domestic section 214 Application filed for the Acquisition of assets of
AMI Communications, Inc. By BCN Telecom, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1252
Wireline Competition Bureau: E-Rate Eligible Services Lists
Friday, September 19
Reply Comments Due:
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: Permanent National Deaf-Blind Equipment
Distribution Program Public Notice
Docket Number: DA 14-1128
From: Diane Cornell
To: Gigi Sohn
Subject: FW: Net "Slowdown"
Date: Monday, September 08, 2014 9:37:46 PM
Gigi, any chance you could talk the community into using [email protected] as an alternative
filing method?
From: Tony Summerlin
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 4:42 PM
To: Gigi Sohn
Cc: Diane Cornell; David Bray
Subject: RE: Net "Slowdown"
Gigi:
The issue is actually a little more complicated than that.
I could tell you that we can accept about 5K every 60 minutes, but that would also mean that if we
got 5K all at once it may shut down.
Realistically we are in a position where the intake will turn people back as the “pipe” gets full. As we
are taking the comments as quickly as possible into a database but they will not be processed real-
time, they will be fed at a more deliberate pace after the fact.
The team has the following to offer.
What we are doing:
- Improving the statistics gathering so we are able to report at hour interval.
- Staff is available on-site and remote and weekend work is being approved.
- The administrative portion of the system can handle about 40,000 comments per day. We can
likely increase the processing to about double but that still leaves us 12 days to process 1 million
comments. Suggest posting a message or notice changing the comment visibility from 24 hours to
48 hours. Also, we may want to reach out to the law firms that sometime expect the comments to
be available within a few minutes. There is a notice saying posting will be delayed by 24 hours.
- We have additional application servers on standby that can be added to the cluster should it be
necessary. Not likely, however, as the database is likely to become the bottleneck.
That leaves us with a few scenarios:
1) Application handles the load
This case we smile and report. However, the likelihood here is low if the volumes reach the
anticipated levels.
2) The application is slow and users are intermittently seeing errors/timeouts We will monitor the
traffic and see if cache tuning is necessary. We will monitor the database and I possible do
additional performance tuning based on traffic patterns. Suggest reaching out to the community
telling users to try again if they were not successful.
3) The application becomes unavailable frequently (application/database issue)
Suggest reaching out to the community and offer [email protected] as an alternative filing
method.
Team will monitor the usage patterns and look for additional optimization.
4) The application becomes unavailable due to bandwidth Suggest reaching out to community and
offer [email protected] as an alternative filing method.
Team will move portions of outbound FCC traffic through GB if necessary.
Suggestion for the filers
- If someone have bulk comments we can work out a different delivery system (cd, file transfer, etc)
and we will upload the comments to ECFS outside the normal intake process using ETL.
- Upload no more than 200,000 per day.
- Upload at nights when the normal traffic is low.
I am sorry there is not better news. We are working as diligently as possible with what we have
available.
I will be available all the time.
Regards,
Tony
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 1:24 PM
To: David Bray; James Miller; Jonathan Sallet; Ruth Milkman; Diane Cornell; Shannon Gilson; Mark
Wigfield; Neil Grace; Kim Hart; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Eric Feigenbaum; Matthew DelNero;
Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Stevan Jechura;
Regina Black
Cc: Claude Aiken; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry
Subject: RE: Net "Slowdown"
Folks –
I talked to my contact, and he is going to see whether they can have the comments come in more
slowly. So question for the IT experts – can we approximate how many comments per hour ECFS
can handle? Thanks! Gigi
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 11:00 AM
To: David Bray; James Miller; Jonathan Sallet; Ruth Milkman; Diane Cornell; Shannon Gilson; Mark
Wigfield; Neil Grace; Kim Hart; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Eric Feigenbaum; Matthew DelNero;
Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Stevan Jechura;
Regina Black
Cc: Claude Aiken; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry
Subject: Net "Slowdown"
Folks – here is the larger list to which updates can be sent. David, you mentioned an Eric S? I can’t
seem to find him in the phone book.
So by my notes, Diane will find out what filings are due on Wed. The rapid response team will
consist of:
Gigi
Michael
Shannon
Sara
Andrew
Stephanie
Tony
I will find out whether there will be one appointed time for comments to be filed, and if so, whether
the activists might be willing to break it up a bit.
Again, if there are any other questions you’d like me to ask, let me know. G
From: Michael Carowitz
To: Gigi Sohn; Diane Cornell; Kris Monteith; Kimberly Wild; D"wana Terry; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
Cc: Melissa Askew
Subject: FW: Net "Slowdown"
Date: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 3:12:47 PM
Please keep Melissa Askew in the loop as well. She’s acting supervisor over ECFS. Thanks.
From: Kris Monteith
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 12:08 PM
To: Gigi Sohn; Diane Cornell
Cc: Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; D'wana Terry
Subject: RE: Net "Slowdown"
Gigi and Diane – Michael is out today and called to let me know he is having problems with his
Blackberry that cannot be fixed until he arrives in the office tomorrow. If you need anything today,
Kim, D’wana and I are all available. Thanks, Kris
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 11:00 AM
To: David Bray; James Miller; Jonathan Sallet; Ruth Milkman; Diane Cornell; Shannon Gilson; Mark
Wigfield; Neil Grace; Kim Hart; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Eric Feigenbaum; Matthew DelNero;
Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Stevan Jechura;
Regina Black
Cc: Claude Aiken; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry
Subject: Net "Slowdown"
Folks – here is the larger list to which updates can be sent. David, you mentioned an Eric S? I can’t
seem to find him in the phone book.
So by my notes, Diane will find out what filings are due on Wed. The rapid response team will
consist of:
Gigi
Michael
Shannon
Sara
Andrew
Stephanie
Tony
I will find out whether there will be one appointed time for comments to be filed, and if so, whether
the activists might be willing to break it up a bit.
Again, if there are any other questions you’d like me to ask, let me know. G
From: David Bray
To: Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart; Gigi Sohn
Subject: FW: OI Numbers Update
Date: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 5:26:46 PM
Attachments: OI-spreadsheet-EndOfDay-15Sept2014.xls
postal or
139 numerous/various before 18 July 66,899 - 172
faxes
33 numerous/various after 18 July + 66,899
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV Total CSV
Cumulative
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments comments
totals
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Friday 12-Sep 1600 111,976 902,488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
Friday 12-Sep End of Day 147,163 937,675 62,486 1,204,123 287,177 505,790 2,647,588
Sunday 14-Sep 1000 8,037 1,066,923 224,630 1,575,341 0 505,790 3,148,054
Sunday 14-Sep End of Day 84,316 1,151,239 268,539 1,619,250 0 505,790 3,276,279
Monday 15-Sep 1000 65,458 1,216,697 108,549 1,727,799 0 505,790 3,450,286
Monday 15-Sep 1200 87,976 1,239,215 124,430 1,743,680 0 505,790 3,488,685
Monday 15-Sep 1400 107,971 1,259,210 142,874 1,762,124 26,499 532,289 3,553,623
Monday 15-Sep 1600 122,364 1,273,603 158,655 1,777,905 0 532,289 3,583,797
Monday 15-Sep midnight 164,962 1,321,086 223,781 1,843,031 4,557 536,846 3,700,963
From: Kim Hart
To: Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn
Subject: FW: The Internet Slowdown was huge
Date: Thursday, September 11, 2014 4:01:53 PM
Hi Brooks,
The Internet Slowdown drove more than 2 million emails and over 300,000 calls (averaging
1,000 per minute) to Congress. On top of that people filed so many pro-Net Neutrality comments
(722,364 to be exact) that the FCC's site broke (again). Politicians in both the House and
Senate got in on the action, major websites spread the word, and by midday it was impossible to
keep up with the #NetNeutrality traffic on Twitter.
Nice work!
The Internet Slowdown was huge, but it was just the beginning.
▪ Final deadline for comments to the FCC. It's coming up on Monday ... share with all of your
friends.
▪ Save the Internet lunchtime rallies in New York City and Philly. Live nearby? Join us this
Monday.
▪ Net Neutrality Action at the FCC. Thousands across the country have called for public
hearings on Net Neutrality. On Sept. 16, we'll bring that message to the FCC's doorstep.
▪ FCC Open Internet Roundtables. We'll spread the truth about Title II at these official FCC
events. You can catch our own policy director, Matt, at 10 a.m. on Sept. 16. Stream it here and
use #FCCRoundtables on Twitter to ask questions.
Thanks—
P.S. There's a lot to accomplish in the months ahead and we can't do it without your support.
Fund the fight with a donation of $10 (or more!) today. Thank you!
Free Press and the Free Press Action Fund are nonpartisan organizations fighting for your rights
to connect and communicate. Learn more at www.freepress.net.
Or if you want me to coordinate a response, happy to help -- we could use the bullets prepared last
night?
Many thanks,
-d.
Folks –
Two important things before I share Tony’s email about our capacity, which he sent to me
yesterday. First, I am still in discussions with the activists about their ability to hold back some
comments and feed them to us on a rolling basis. They are not interested in potential commenters
being frustrated either. But having folks deliver their comments to the email address is not an
option, unfortunately. I will keep folks apprised as I hear more.
Second, since I will be in Cleveland tomorrow giving a speech, Shannon will be the lead on this issue
going forward. I will have a fair amount of down time during the day, so would like to be kept in the
loop with the rapid response team, but I won’t be in a position to turn things around quickly.
Here is Tony’s response to my question about our comment-taking capacity (in black font). Thanks
to him, David and the team for taking the brunt of this!
The issue is actually a little more complicated than that.
I could tell you that we can accept about 5K every 60 minutes, but that would also mean that if we
got 5K all at once it may shut down.
Realistically we are in a position where the intake will turn people back as the “pipe” gets full. As we
are taking the comments as quickly as possible into a database but they will not be processed real-
time, they will be fed at a more deliberate pace after the fact.
The team has the following to offer.
What we are doing:
- Improving the statistics gathering so we are able to report at hour interval.
- Staff is available on-site and remote and weekend work is being approved.
- The administrative portion of the system can handle about 40,000 comments per day. We can
likely increase the processing to about double but that still leaves us 12 days to process 1 million
comments. Suggest posting a message or notice changing the comment visibility from 24 hours to
48 hours. Also, we may want to reach out to the law firms that sometime expect the comments to
be available within a few minutes. There is a notice saying posting will be delayed by 24 hours.
- We have additional application servers on standby that can be added to the cluster should it be
necessary. Not likely, however, as the database is likely to become the bottleneck.
That leaves us with a few scenarios:
1) Application handles the load
This case we smile and report. However, the likelihood here is low if the volumes reach the
anticipated levels.
2) The application is slow and users are intermittently seeing errors/timeouts We will monitor the
traffic and see if cache tuning is necessary. We will monitor the database and I possible do
additional performance tuning based on traffic patterns. Suggest reaching out to the community
telling users to try again if they were not successful.
3) The application becomes unavailable frequently (application/database issue)
Suggest reaching out to the community and offer [email protected] as an alternative filing
method.
Team will monitor the usage patterns and look for additional optimization.
4) The application becomes unavailable due to bandwidth Suggest reaching out to community and
offer [email protected] as an alternative filing method.
Team will move portions of outbound FCC traffic through GB if necessary.
Suggestion for the filers
- If someone have bulk comments we can work out a different delivery system (cd, file transfer, etc)
and we will upload the comments to ECFS outside the normal intake process using ETL.
- Upload no more than 200,000 per day.
- Upload at nights when the normal traffic is low.
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 1:24 PM
To: David Bray; James Miller; Jonathan Sallet; Ruth Milkman; Diane Cornell; Shannon Gilson; Mark
Wigfield; Neil Grace; Kim Hart; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Eric Feigenbaum; Matthew DelNero;
Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Stevan Jechura;
Regina Black
Cc: Claude Aiken; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry
Subject: RE: Net "Slowdown"
Folks –
I talked to my contact, and he is going to see whether they can have the comments come in more
slowly. So question for the IT experts – can we approximate how many comments per hour ECFS
can handle? Thanks! Gigi
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 11:00 AM
To: David Bray; James Miller; Jonathan Sallet; Ruth Milkman; Diane Cornell; Shannon Gilson; Mark
Wigfield; Neil Grace; Kim Hart; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Eric Feigenbaum; Matthew DelNero;
Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Stevan Jechura;
Regina Black
Cc: Claude Aiken; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry
Subject: Net "Slowdown"
Folks – here is the larger list to which updates can be sent. David, you mentioned an Eric S? I can’t
seem to find him in the phone book.
So by my notes, Diane will find out what filings are due on Wed. The rapid response team will
consist of:
Gigi
Michael
Shannon
Sara
Andrew
Stephanie
Tony
I will find out whether there will be one appointed time for comments to be filed, and if so, whether
the activists might be willing to break it up a bit.
Again, if there are any other questions you’d like me to ask, let me know. G
From: Shannon Gilson
To: TW; Ruth Milkman; Jonathan Sallet; Philip Verveer; Diane Cornell
Cc: Gigi Sohn; Kim Hart
Subject: OI comment count
Date: Friday, September 12, 2014 6:56:57 PM
Mr. Chairman,
We’ve hit 2.6 million OI comments. Per David, 505,790 comments via CSV files alone just today. The
count continues tonight with outstanding numbers in the ECFS system and the OI mailbox. We will
have an updated count in the morning and may tweet out the number.
Best,
Shannon
From: Shannon Gilson
To: TW
Cc: Jonathan Sallet; Ruth Milkman; Kim Hart; Diane Cornell; Gigi Sohn; Jon Wilkins
Subject: OI Comments Plan Final
Date: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 7:21:55 PM
Attachments: 9 9OICommentsPlanFINAL.docx
Mr. Chairman,
Attached is the press response document that includes a draft statement, tweets, QA and
current OI comment numbers. The QA and talking points have been approved by the full
team. IT and CGB are responsible for providing updated comment numbers at noon and at
5:30 p.m. tomorrow. We have assembled a rapid response team to closely coordinate as the
day unfolds. Below is the team, the agreed-upon protocol and a full list of bureau comment
deadlines through September 19.
Rapid Response Team
OMR: Shannon/Mark
IT: David/Tony/Mary Ellen/Eric
OGC: Jon/Stephanie
WCB: Julie/Matt
CGB: Michael/Kris
OLA: Sara/Andrew
Stakeholder: Gigi/Eric
OCH: Diane
Protocol
IT will resume their SITREP emails to keep the team up to speed on the volume of traffic
ECFS is experiencing. If a public-facing response is needed, final sign off will include one
person from the OMR, IT, OGC, CGB and WCB teams. To be clear, in order to execute
quickly, we will deploy as soon as we have appropriate sign off rather than delay to get
every team member’s input. If activity escalates to point where the system is significantly
overwhelmed, public reaction is outside the scope of what we have anticipated or there is
an apparent cyber-attack, I will convene a phone call for the rapid response group to discuss
a path forward and determine if you needs to briefed.
We will send tweets from the FCC account early in the morning to encourage people to
send comments to the OI email address. In addition, Gigi has been working with the parties
to encourage them to direct traffic to the email address. However, given the anticipated
level of interest, you should expect the ECFS system may be overwhelmed or disrupted in
some fashion.
Please let me know if you have any questions.
Thanks,
Shannon
Comment Due through 9/19
Thursday, September 11
Comments Due:
International Bureau: Request for Coordination of Canadian Earth Stations with USA
Terrestrial Fixed Stations
Wireline Competition Bureau: WCB Seeks Comment On Rural LECS Petition For Limited And
Expedited Waiver of the Commission's Intercarrier Compensation Revenue Recovery Rules
For Rate-Of-Return Carriers
Docket Number: DA-14-1175
Wireline Competition Bureau: WCB Seeks Comment On Wilkes Telephone Membership
Corporation Petition For Limited And Expedited Waiver Of The Commission's Intercarrier
Compensation Revenue Recovery Rules For Rate-Of-Return Carriers
Docket Number: DA-14-1176
Wireline Competition Bureau: Domestic Section 214 Application Filed For The Acquisition Of
Assets Of G4 Communications Corporation And G4 Telecom NH, Inc. By Segtel, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1250
Wireline Competition bureau: Domestic section 214 Application filed for the Acquisition of
assets of AMI Communications, Inc. By BCN Telecom, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1252
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: CGB Seeks Comment On Its Tentative Findings
About The Accessibility Of Communications Technologies For The 2014 Biennial Report
Under The Twenty-First Century Communications And Video Accessibility Act
Docket Number: DA-14-1255
Reply Comments Due:
Wireline Competition Bureau: Domestic Section 214 Application Filed for the Transfer of
Control of World Communications, Inc. to Integra Telecom Holdings, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1175
Friday, September 12
Comments Due:
International Bureau: FCC Seeks Comment on Recommendations Approved by the Advisory
Committee for the 2015 World Radio Communication Conference
Docket Number: DA-14-1248
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau
Seeks Comment on Petition Concerning the Commission's Rule on Opt-Out Notices on Fax
Advertisements
Docket Number: DA-14-1259
Monday, September 15
Comments Due:
Wireline Competition bureau: E-Rate FNPRN
Reply Comments Due:
Wireline Competition Bureau: Protecting and Promoting the Open Internet
Wireline Competition Bureau: WCB Seeks to Refresh the Record in the 2010 Proceeding on
Title II and Other Potential Legal Frameworks for Broadband Internet Access Service
Wireline Competition Bureau: E-Rate FNPRN
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: Santander (Consumer consent for robocalls)
Public Notice
Docket Number: DA 14-1122
Tuesday, September 16
Comments Due:
Media Bureau: AT&T/DirecTV
Docket Number: MB 14-90
Wednesday, September 17
N/A
Friday, September 18
Reply Comments Due:
Wireline Competition Bureau: 10th NOI Broadband Progress Report
WC Docket Number: 14-126
Wireline Competition Bureau: Domestic Section 214 Application Filed For The Acquisition Of
Assets Of G4 Communications Corporation And G4 Telecom NH, Inc. By Segtel, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1250
Wireline Competition bureau: Domestic section 214 Application filed for the Acquisition of
assets of AMI Communications, Inc. By BCN Telecom, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1252
Wireline Competition Bureau: E-Rate Eligible Services Lists
Friday, September 19
Reply Comments Due:
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: Permanent National Deaf-Blind Equipment
Distribution Program Public Notice
Docket Number: DA 14-1128
From: Michael Carowitz
To: David Bray; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero;
Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: OI Numbers Update
Date: Monday, September 15, 2014 4:21:59 PM
4:00pm Numbers:
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV Total CSV
Cumulative
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments comments
totals
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Friday 12-Sep 1600 111,976 902,488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
Friday 12-Sep End of Day 147,163 937,675 62,486 1,204,123 287,177 505,790 2,647,588
Sunday 14-Sep 1000 8,037 1,066,923 224,630 1,575,341 0 505,790 3,148,054
Sunday 14-Sep End of Day 84,316 1,151,239 268,539 1,619,250 0 505,790 3,276,279
Monday 15-Sep 1000 65,458 1,216,697 108,549 1,727,799 0 505,790 3,450,286
Monday 15-Sep 1200 87,976 1,239,215 124,430 1,743,680 0 505,790 3,488,685
Monday 15-Sep 1400 107,971 1,259,210 142,874 1,762,124 26,499 532,289 3,553,623
Monday 15-Sep 1600 122,364 1,273,603 158,655 1,777,905 0 532,289
3,583,797
From: Matthew DelNero
To: Jonathan Sallet; Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart
Cc: Julie Veach; Stephanie Weiner; Patrick Halley; Gigi Sohn; Claude Aiken; Kristine Fargotstein
Subject: RE: Blog
Date: Monday, September 22, 2014 12:03:28 PM
Thanks. The reference to other Internet access subs is a tip of the hat to John Windhausen and his
clients -- one of their themes is that libraries, schools, etc. rely on Internet access, and they worry that
"consumers" doesn't cover the ground. But I certainly defer to you on that. We generally refer just to
consumers, so it wouldn't be out of the ordinary to do the same here.
Kristine reminds me that Yahoo! doesn't have comments that are as clear as AOL's on legal authority, so
I'd suggest that we just refer to AOL. If there are no further comments, I'll circulate a final version with
that change.
Matt
-----Original Message-----
From: Jonathan Sallet
Sent: Monday, September 22, 2014 11:52 AM
To: Matthew DelNero; Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart
Cc: Julie Veach; Stephanie Weiner; Patrick Halley; Gigi Sohn; Claude Aiken; Kristine Fargotstein
Subject: RE: Blog
One suggested change in the blog about which I do not feel strongly.
-----Original Message-----
From: Matthew DelNero
Sent: Monday, September 22, 2014 11:40 AM
To: Shannon Gilson; Jonathan Sallet; Kim Hart
Cc: Julie Veach; Stephanie Weiner; Patrick Halley; Gigi Sohn; Claude Aiken; Kristine Fargotstein
Subject: RE: Blog
Matt
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Monday, September 22, 2014 9:43 AM
To: Jonathan Sallet; Kim Hart
Cc: Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Patrick Halley
Subject: RE: Blog
Great. Can we post by 1? We have a Chairman blog that will go up around 3 or 4.
-----Original Message-----
From: Jonathan Sallet
Sent: Monday, September 22, 2014 8:22 AM
To: Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart
Cc: Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Patrick Halley
Subject: Blog
Shannon, thanks. With apologies for the confusion, the “Legal Frameworks for Broadband Internet
Access” will be due Sept. 15 – it moves concurrent with the O/I proceeding.
Matt
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 6:28 PM
To: Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Sara Morris; Maria
Kirby; Renee Gregory; Patrick Halley; Ruth Milkman; Philip Verveer; Andrew Woelfling; Eric Feigenbaum
Cc: Diane Cornell; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield
Subject: Comment due through 9/19
All,
Below is the compiled list of comment deadlines we received from the bureaus through next Friday.
Thanks to Diane and Bartees for the help in pulling this together.
Shannon
Wednesday, September 10
Reply Comments are due:
Wireline Competition Bureau: WCB Seeks to Refresh the Record in the 2010 Proceeding on Title II
and Other Potential Legal Frameworks for Broadband Internet Access Service
Docket Number: DA-14-748
Thursday, September 11
Comments Due:
International Bureau: Request for Coordination of Canadian Earth Stations with USA Terrestrial Fixed
Stations
Wireline Competition Bureau: WCB Seeks Comment On Rural LECS Petition For Limited And
Expedited Waiver of the Commission's Intercarrier Compensation Revenue Recovery Rules For Rate-
Of-Return Carriers
Docket Number: DA-14-1175
Wireline Competition Bureau: WCB Seeks Comment On Wilkes Telephone Membership Corporation
Petition For Limited And Expedited Waiver Of The Commission's Intercarrier Compensation Revenue
Recovery Rules For Rate-Of-Return Carriers
Docket Number: DA-14-1176
Wireline Competition Bureau: Domestic Section 214 Application Filed For The Acquisition Of Assets
Of G4 Communications Corporation And G4 Telecom NH, Inc. By Segtel, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1250
Wireline Competition bureau: Domestic section 214 Application filed for the Acquisition of assets of
AMI Communications, Inc. By BCN Telecom, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1252
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: CGB Seeks Comment On Its Tentative Findings About
The Accessibility Of Communications Technologies For The 2014 Biennial Report Under The Twenty-
First Century Communications And Video Accessibility Act
Docket Number: DA-14-1255
Reply Comments Due:
Wireline Competition Bureau: Domestic Section 214 Application Filed for the Transfer of Control of
World Communications, Inc. to Integra Telecom Holdings, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1175
Friday, September 12
Comments Due:
International Bureau: FCC Seeks Comment on Recommendations Approved by the Advisory
Committee for the 2015 World Radio Communication Conference
Docket Number: DA-14-1248
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau Seeks
Comment on Petition Concerning the Commission's Rule on Opt-Out Notices on Fax Advertisements
Docket Number: DA-14-1259
Monday, September 15
Comments Due:
Wireline Competition bureau: E-Rate FNPRN
Reply Comments Due:
Wireline Competition Bureau: Protecting and Promoting the Open Internet
Wireline Competition Bureau: E-Rate FNPRN
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: Santander (Consumer consent for robocalls) Public
Notice
Docket Number: DA 14-1122
Tuesday, September 16
Comments Due:
Media Bureau: AT&T/DirecTV
Docket Number: MB 14-90
Wednesday, September 17
N/A
Friday, September 18
Reply Comments Due:
Wireline Competition Bureau: 10th NOI Broadband Progress Report
WC Docket Number: 14-126
Wireline Competition Bureau: Domestic Section 214 Application Filed For The Acquisition Of Assets
Of G4 Communications Corporation And G4 Telecom NH, Inc. By Segtel, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1250
Wireline Competition bureau: Domestic section 214 Application filed for the Acquisition of assets of
AMI Communications, Inc. By BCN Telecom, Inc.
Docket Number: DA-14-1252
Wireline Competition Bureau: E-Rate Eligible Services Lists
Friday, September 19
Reply Comments Due:
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau: Permanent National Deaf-Blind Equipment
Distribution Program Public Notice
Docket Number: DA 14-1128
From: Matthew DelNero
To: Stephanie Weiner; Michael Carowitz; Kris Monteith; Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Kim Hart; Eric Feigenbaum;
Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Tony Summerlin; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox; Mary Ellen Seale;
Jonathan Sallet; Claude Aiken; Erik Scheibert
Subject: RE: Comment response doc
Date: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 3:12:25 PM
Attachments: 9 9OICommentsUpdated (ssw) (msd).docx
Shannon, thanks. I’ve attached a redline with some edits for your consideration. As you’ll see, I
think it could help in the ‘proof points’ section to point out how the roundtables have been
informed by the record.
Matt
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 6:30 PM
To: Kim Hart; Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox; Mary Ellen
Seale; Jonathan Sallet; David Bray
Subject: Re: Comment response doc
Adding David.
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Monday, September 8, 2014 5:08 PM
To: Kim Hart; Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox; Mary Ellen
Seale; Jonathan Sallet
Subject: Comment response doc
All,
Please review and provide any comments or additional questions we need to be prepared for by
10am tomorrow. Most of this language has already been deployed. Please let me know where we
may need to refresh.
In addition to the current comment numbers, it would be great to have an answer to this question
tonight.
QA
Q. What are you doing to prepare for Wednesday’s flood of comments? Do you anticipate ECFS
will go down?[SG1]
Thanks,
Shannon
Shannon, thanks. I’ve attached a redline with some edits for your consideration. As you’ll see, I
think it could help in the ‘proof points’ section to point out how the roundtables have been
informed by the record.
Matt
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 6:30 PM
To: Kim Hart; Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox; Mary Ellen
Seale; Jonathan Sallet; David Bray
Subject: Re: Comment response doc
Adding David.
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Monday, September 8, 2014 5:08 PM
To: Kim Hart; Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox; Mary Ellen
Seale; Jonathan Sallet
Subject: Comment response doc
All,
Please review and provide any comments or additional questions we need to be prepared for by
10am tomorrow. Most of this language has already been deployed. Please let me know where we
may need to refresh.
In addition to the current comment numbers, it would be great to have an answer to this question
tonight.
QA
Q. What are you doing to prepare for Wednesday’s flood of comments? Do you anticipate ECFS
will go down?[SG1]
Thanks,
Shannon
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 04:29 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: David Bray; Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Michael Carowitz; Kris Monteith;
Kim Hart; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Tony Summerlin; Gigi Sohn;
Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox; Mary Ellen Seale; Jonathan Sallet; Claude Aiken; Erik
Scheibert; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Comment response doc
All,
I want to confirm below is the rapid response team for tomorrow.
Rapid Response:
OMR: Shannon/Mark
IT: David/Tony/Mary Ellen/Eric
OGC: Jon/Stephanie
WCB: Julie/Matt
CGB: Michael/Kris
OLA: Sara/Andrew
Stakeholder: Gigi/Eric
OCH: Diane
Protocol: IT will resume their SITREP emails to keep us up to speed on inbound. If a public facing
response is needed, i.e., tweets need to be deployed, etc., baseline sign off includes ONE person
from the OMR, IT, OGC, CGB and WCB teams. To be clear, we will not hold so everyone can weigh
in if we have an appropriate level of sign off.
If activity escalates to point where the system is significantly overwhelmed, public reaction is
outside the scope of what we anticipated, or there is an apparent cyber attack, I will convene a
phone call for the rapid response group where will discuss a path forward and determine if the
Chairman needs to briefed and his role in decision making.
Early in the morning, we will send tweets from the FCC account encouraging people to send
comments to the email address.
Please let me know if you have any questions or thoughts regarding process.
Thanks,
Shannon
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 3:25 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Michael Carowitz; Kris Monteith; Kim Hart;
Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Tony Summerlin; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees
Cox; Mary Ellen Seale; Jonathan Sallet; Claude Aiken; Erik Scheibert
Subject: RE: Comment response doc
In before 3:30pm – just updated the IT-related tweets if something does happen. Hope this helps.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 3:15 PM
To: Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Michael Carowitz; Kris Monteith; David Bray; Kim Hart; Eric
Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Tony Summerlin; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox;
Mary Ellen Seale; Jonathan Sallet; Claude Aiken; Erik Scheibert
Subject: RE: Comment response doc
Thanks, all. Pens down at 3:30. I need to move this forward.
From: Matthew DelNero
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 3:12 PM
To: Stephanie Weiner; Michael Carowitz; Kris Monteith; Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Kim Hart; Eric
Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Tony Summerlin; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox;
Mary Ellen Seale; Jonathan Sallet; Claude Aiken; Erik Scheibert
Subject: RE: Comment response doc
I had just a few edits for your consideration. Thanks.
Matt
From: Stephanie Weiner
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 2:36 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Kris Monteith; Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Matthew DelNero; Kim Hart; Eric
Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Tony Summerlin; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox;
Mary Ellen Seale; Jonathan Sallet; Claude Aiken; Erik Scheibert
Subject: RE: Comment response doc
A few suggested edits in redline with explanatory balloons. (I had already done this on the draft
Shannon sent, rather than the CGB one – sorry for any version issues.)
-Stephanie
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 2:34 PM
To: Kris Monteith; Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Matthew DelNero; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner; Eric
Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Tony Summerlin; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox;
Mary Ellen Seale; Jonathan Sallet; Claude Aiken; Erik Scheibert
Subject: RE: Comment response doc
Yesterday’s numbers are attached. Thanks!
From: Kris Monteith
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 2:21 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Matthew DelNero; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara
Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Tony Summerlin; Michael Carowitz; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox;
Mary Ellen Seale; Jonathan Sallet; Claude Aiken; Erik Scheibert
Subject: RE: Comment response doc
We will have numbers to you shortly. Thanks.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 2:14 PM
To: David Bray; Matthew DelNero; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew
Woelfling; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees Cox;
Mary Ellen Seale; Jonathan Sallet; Claude Aiken; Erik Scheibert
Subject: RE: Comment response doc
All,
Here is the updated doc. I need yesterday’s numbers as a baseline for the chart by 4p.m. today.
Thanks,
Shannon
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 8:56 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Matthew DelNero; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris;
Andrew Woelfling; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Bartees
Cox; Mary Ellen Seale; Jonathan Sallet; Claude Aiken; Erik Scheibert
Subject: RE: Comment response doc
The Q/As I could help answer have been added. I'm copying Erik Scheibert as lead for the tech team
who can work w/ CGB to help get the counts for ECFS in terms of comments received. Hope this helps.
I agree strongly. Someone from OMR told the New Yorker at 5:30 yesterday that we had received 100K
comments, and that’s what made people crazy. Don’t know why they did that.
From: Tony Summerlin
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:05 PM
To: Gigi Sohn
Subject: RE: Comment update
I would say that we should stop self-inflicted wounds and stop reporting numbers until we are ready. There is
no requirement to try and be this responsive on providing numbers.
Just my 2 cents…
Regards,
Tony
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:22 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark
Wigfield; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Comment update
I RTd as well and talked to the activists - there was some confusion on their part about what we said to
press and when. They should be good now.
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 01:15 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark
Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Comment update
All,
In order to tamp down some unrest on Twitter that we aren’t providing accurate numbers, Kim sent out the
tweet below (approved by OGC/IT) FCC and David RT’d.
"Due to high number of comments received in last 24 hours, we do not yet have an official comment count. Will
provide ASAP."
Stephanie is working through if can facilitate comment collection outside of ECFS.
Will circle back when we have a plan.
Thanks,
Shannon
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:27 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Good morning. Can we get yesterday's total?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:40 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:34 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Can we get the latest numbers?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
All in one place:
As of noon
Total comments received 9/10: 73,606
Cumulative total: 1,477, 301
Of the 73,606:
ECFS: 29,177/521,620 (so far)
Mailbox: 44,429/955,681.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:36 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
OI Mailbox – 44,429 new comments as of noon, for a cumulative total of 955,681. Thanks.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:20 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Sorry, that’s 29,177 since yesterday. (I have a calculator with a bad display.)
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:18 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
The ECFS numbers as of 12 noon are at 521,620. That’s 23,111 ne comments in ECFS since
yesterday’s numbers. I’m in the process of getting the OI mailbox numbers. Thanks.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 12:58 PM
To: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Needed: Numbers Update
IT/CGB,
Can we get a numbers update as of 12:00/12:30? Are we experiencing any issues with ECFS or the mail box so
far?
As a reminder, we will need another data pull at 5:00/5:30.
Thanks,
Shannon
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received E-mails
received
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:41 PM
To: Gigi Sohn; David Bray; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Diane Cornell; Ruth Milkman
Cc: Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:35 PM
To: Gigi Sohn; David Bray; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner
Cc: Sagar Doshi
Subject: FW: Comments sent to [email protected]
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:34 PM
To: Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner;
Tony Summerlin; Jonathan Sallet; Matthew DelNero
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Gigi, Lamar's and a few other edits included. OGC, are we good to post?
-----Original Message-----
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:32 PM
To: Lamar Robertson; David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie
Weiner; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Looks great - I would just change "this" to "the" in the first sentence. G
-----Original Message-----
From: Lamar Robertson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:30 PM
To: David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Gigi Sohn; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner;
Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
One additional minor tweak. We had the word "comment" three times in two sentences so I deleted
one.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:28 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie
Weiner; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Looks great to me, we are preparing the URL for the CSV template and instructions now.
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:26 PM
To: Erik Scheibert; David Bray; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner;
Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Revised
-----Original Message-----
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:24 PM
To: David Bray; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Shannon Gilson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie
Weiner; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: Re: Comments sent to [email protected]
Based on our conversation we will post the csv file and an instruction file and give you the URLs shorly.
Thank you,
Erik
---
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
445 Twelfth Street SW.
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-1248
>I also wouldn’t talk about our systems or the strain – here’s a shorter
>version.
>
>
>Erik, can we create a webpage with the CSV and instructions for the
>blog to link to?
>
>
>Many thanks,
>
>
>-d.
>
>
>From: Gigi Sohn
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:09 PM
>To: Lamar Robertson; David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart;
>Stephanie Weiner; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith;
>CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Please, we should not put out any numbers at all.
>
>
>From: Lamar Robertson
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:06 PM
>To: David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie
>Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith;
>CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>FCC history was made yesterday. The Commission has now received more
>than
>1.47 million comments as part of our Open Internet proceeding, breaking
>the record set after Janet Jackson’s infamous halftime performance at
>the 2004 Super Bowl. The volume of public feedback in this proceeding
>has been commensurate with the importance of this effort to preserve a
>free and open Internet.
>
>The new mark was set thanks in part to a coordinated effort yesterday
>to get Internet freedom supporters to express their views with the
>Commission. The high-volume of comments driven by this national
>campaign overwhelmed the Commission’s IT networks at times. As a
>result, we have not been able to fully process all of the comments
>submitted yesterday.
>
>
>The Commission is working to ensure that they are processed and that we
>have a full accounting of the number of comments received as soon as
>possible. Most important, commenters should know that all of these
>comments will be reviewed and considered as part of the rulemaking
>process.
>
>
>Of course, this proceeding remains open, and we expect another surge of
>public input as we approach the deadline for reply comments in the
>coming days. In the Commission’s embrace of Open Data and a commitment
>to openness and transparency throughout the Open Internet proceedings,
>the FCC would like to make available a Common Separated Values (CSV)
>file for bulk upload of comments given the exceptional interest in
>providing comments.
> All comments will be received and recorded through the same process we
>are applying for the [email protected] emails.
>
>
>Attached is a link to the CSV file template along with instructions.
>Once completed, the CSV file can be emailed to [email protected]
>where if it matches the template the individual comments will be filed
>for the public record with the Electronic Comment Filing System. For
>import, we encourage CSV files of 9MB or less via email.
>
>The bottom line is that the Commission welcomes the record-setting
>level of public input in this proceeding, and we want to do everything
>we can to make sure everyone’s voice are heard and reflected in the
>public record.
>
>
>From: David Bray
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 2:13 PM
>To: Shannon Gilson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn;
>Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Lamar Robertson; Kris
>Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Draft Blog Post language – IT will work with CGB to establish a way of
>ingesting the CSV files received via [email protected]
>
>In the Commission’s embrace of Open Data and a commitment to openness
>and transparency throughout the Open Internet proceedings, the FCC
>would like to make available a Common Separated Values (CSV) file for
>bulk upload of comments given the exceptional interest in providing
>comments. All comments will be received and recorded through the same
>process we are applying for the [email protected] emails.
>
>
>Here is a link to the CSV file template along with instructions. Once
>completed, the CSV file can be emailed to [email protected] where if
>it matches the template the individual comments will be filed for the
>public record with the Electronic Comment Filing System. For import, we
>encourage CSV files of 9MB or less via email.
>
>Fields:
>
>
>Proceeding Number -> Which proceeding you want it filed against, note:
>the Open Internet proceeding is 14-28.
>
>Name of Filer -> Who is the person that is giving the comments
>(Required) Email Address -> The email address of the filer (Optional)
>
>Address Line 1 -> Address (Required)
>Address Line 2 -> Address (Optional)
>City -> City (Required)
>State -> State (Required) Would prefer to the Valid 2 letter code for
>the state.
>Zip -> Zip (Required)
>+4 -> +4 (Optional)
>Date Received -> The date you want reflected in ECFS the filing was
>received (Business Day only) (Required) If missing will be set to the
>date the CSV file was received)
>
>Comment -> The text of the comment to be submitted (Required)
>
>Values that will be set upon import into ECFS:
>
>Filing Type -> COMMENT
>Brief Indicator -> Yes
>Filed From -> X Express
>
>
>
>From: Shannon Gilson
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:54 PM
>To: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn;
>Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Lamar Robertson
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>We are discussing next steps on a call shortly. Thanks.
>
>
>From: Sagar Doshi
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:53 PM
>To: Kim Hart; Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn;
>Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Lamar Robertson
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Do we need to wait for a blog post at 3pm to give them our template?
>Can we not agree that we’ll get a blog post out today to cover our
>legal obligations, and in the meantime get Holmes the template so they
>can start filling it out?
>
>Timing is critical in my mind, so unless there’s a reason to hold back,
>I’d be in favor of getting them the form ASAP.
>
>Sagar
>
>
>From: Kim Hart
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:48 PM
>To: Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Tony
>Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Lamar
>Robertson
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>All, just as an FYI, they put out this press release. Note the
>highlighted portion.
>
>For Immediate Release: 11 September 2014
>Contact: Christina DiPasquale, 202.716.1953,
>[email protected]
>**NOTE: The volume of comments overwhelmed the FCC’s servers during the
>slowdown. Fight for the Future is in contact with the FCC’s tech team
>and is working out a solution to ensure that every comment is filed
>properly.** The Internet Slowdown by the Numbers Day of protest
>generates nearly 300,000 calls and more than 2 million emails to
>Congress; 722,364 people filed comments at the FCC WASHINGTON – On
>Wednesday, tech companies, websites, public interest organizations and
>Internet users joined forces to demonstrate overwhelming support for
>stronger Net Neutrality protections.
>Participants in the Internet Slowdown added a spinning icon
>representing a slow-loading Internet to their sites. Millions of
>people clicked through the icon to a series of actions to members of
>Congress, the White House and the FCC.
>Demand Progress, Engine Advocacy, Fight for the Future and the Free
>Press Action Fund organized the Internet Slowdown. The Battle for the
>Net website featuring updates and actions is
>www.battleforthenet.com/sept10th
><http://www.battleforthenet.com/sept10th>.
>Here are the numbers from the Internet Slowdown:
>Calls made to Congress: 286,192
>Emails sent to Congress: 2,167,092
>Comments filed at the FCC: 722,364
>Calls per minute to Congress (during peak hours from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.):
>1,000
>Participating websites: more than 10,000 Facebook shares of spinning
>icon: more than 1,120,000 These numbers are valid as of 10 p.m. Eastern
>time on Wednesday. The final tally on Wednesday's action will be
>provided at https://www.battleforthenet.com/.
>“The numbers tell the story: People everywhere are using the Internet
>to save the Internet from phone and cable companies,” said Fight for
>the Future Campaign Director Evan Greer. “We've shown that the best way
>to fight these powerful special interests in Washington is through
>mass action by people from outside Washington. The FCC and Congress can
>no longer dismiss the overwhelming consensus of public support for real
>Net Neutrality protections.
>"The Internet Slowdown was the biggest day of online activism since the
>Internet Blackout of 2012, when people rejected the SOPA and PIPA
>copyright bills," said Demand Progress Executive Director David Segal.
>"As the FCC decision on Net
> Neutrality approaches, Internet users will continue to speak out in
>numbers and with a message that will be impossible to ignore."
>“Internet users spoke out loud and clear on Wednesday," said Free Press
>Action Fund President and CEO Craig Aaron. “They're united against FCC
>Chairman Tom Wheeler's plan to allow fast and slow lanes on the Internet.
>The chairman must now
> listen to the public, abandon his pay-to-play plan, and pursue the
>best and only path to real Net Neutrality protections -- by
>reclassifying Internet service providers as common carriers."
>###
>
>
>From: Shannon Gilson
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:43 PM
>To: David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Tony Summerlin; Erik
>Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew
>DelNero; Lamar Robertson
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Adding Lamar. Let’s aim to have a draft of a blog post no later than 3.
>
>
>From: David Bray
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:39 PM
>To: Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik
>Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>One item to note – CSVs can allow for easy duplication of comments
>(i.e., write one comment, cut and paste 1 million times).
>
>
>Should we say anything in the blog post that “All comments will be
>received and recorded through the same process we are applying for the
>[email protected] emails” – which, I hope, would mean scanning for
>duplicates or non-relevant comments?
>
>
>From: Stephanie Weiner
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:35 PM
>To: David Bray; Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik
>Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>(David, sorry I missed this email where you clearly laid out that your
>team would send a template, rather than us just receiving a .CSV file).
>
>All,
>
>OGC feels that the .CSV approach is certainly a reasonable way to help
>prevent ECFS problems due to high volume while ensuring that interested
>parties can submit their comments to the agency.
>
>However, there is an issue related to appearance and whether this would
>be perceived as providing special treatment to one organization. To
>guard against this, we would recommend some kind of public statement
>either (1) publishing the template or (2) making it know that this
>avenue is available upon
>request. This could be done through a public notice, but could also be
>done via a blog or web posting – as we did for the email in box.
>
>I will be on the call at 2:30 to discuss further.
>
>Stephanie
>
>
>From: David Bray
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 11:55 AM
>To: Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik
>Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Just to confirm:
>
>
>·
>Erik will email to the group a .CSV template they can use to put all
>their comment in… as long as they’re in ECFS by the time the FCC makes
>a decision on the matter we’re okay.
>
>·
>We will not advertise that the FCC doing this (?) however if anyone
>else asks, we will provide the same .CSV file (alternatively we could
>make the CSV file available for download as a blog post)
>
>·
>I’m not sure we need to the problems, once received we quickly can
>verify the number of comments they have in their CSV file and update
>the daily total to include it, with the expectation they will be
>ingested by ECFS?
>
>Is this the plan? Just wanted to check. Many thanks all.
>
>
>-d.
>
>
>From: Stephanie Weiner
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 11:51 AM
>To: Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Tony Summerlin; Erik
>Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero
>Subject: Re: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>This is fine. No legal issue so long as the submissions are put into
>the official record (ECFS) by the time the FCC makes a decision on the
>matter.
>
>
>
>We should make sure the tweets are accurate of course.
>
>
>
>Stephanie
>
>
>
>From:
>Gigi Sohn
>
>Sent:
>Thursday, September 11, 2014 11:38 AM
>
>To:
>Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>
>Cc:
>Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero;
>Stephanie Weiner
>
>Subject:
>RE: Comments sent to
>[email protected]
>
>
>
>I am very much in favor of trying to accommodate them as much as we can
>since they were so accommodating of us yesterday. Can we get a sense
>from OGC ASAP
> about whether David and Tony’s idea is kosher?
>
>From: Shannon Gilson
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 10:55 AM
>To: David Bray; Gigi Sohn; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew
>DelNero; Stephanie Weiner
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Adding others.
>
>
>From: David Bray
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 10:41 AM
>To: Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Tony and I were talking - and if the FCC legally is okay with just
>emailing this group the template - that is also an option.
>
>We will stand-by for instruction.
>
>In the interim -- Erik can you ask your team to produce a CSV template
>of the fields that mirror ECFS and would permit easy ingest? We will
>have this ready if needed.
>
>Many thanks.
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: David Bray
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 10:33 AM Eastern Standard Time
>To: Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>*store* CSV files (autocorrect type below)
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: David Bray
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 10:32 AM Eastern Standard Time
>To: Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>Internal FCC Only
>
>We have a license for Box.com -- similar to DropBox -- that we could
>announce today for everyone to stop CSV files if they want and that the
>CSV files will be ingested if they follow the proscribed template.
>
>We would have to specify the template. It could mirror ECFS's fields.
>We could publish the template and allow anyone to download it and put
>it into the Box location.
>
>We would say only CSV files will be ingested and only if they follow
>the template.
>
>Thoughts?
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Holmes Wilson [(b) (6) ]
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 10:26 AM Eastern Standard Time
>To: Gigi Sohn
>Cc: David Segal; David Bray; Sagar Doshi; Marvin Ammori
>([email protected]); Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart
>Subject: Re: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>Hi Gigi–
>
>
>So, the latest on the FCC site is that it was just going up and down
>for us all night. We weren’t able to submit comments directly.
>
>
>
>I’ve got a proposal that would make it easier for all of us, but I want
>to make sure we’re on the same page about reporting the numbers, so
>that press doesn’t get thrown off or given bad numbers by folks looking
>to minimize what happened yesterday.
>
>
>
>We can send your team a single file in the format of your choice (a
>.csv spreadsheet file is probably simplest) with the enormous number of
>comments we collected yesterday (over 700k I believe). Then we can send
>you periodic updates going forward, again in the file format of your
>choice. We’d prefer to send one file than submit emails, because
>sending large numbers of emails is has hidden complexities and is
>potentially unreliable.
>
>
>
>But if we do that, can you tweet from @fcc early today, something like:
>
>
>
>"The FCC server has had problems with the large number of comments, so
>the number on the docket website is not the official number. We’ll have
>an official number soon."
>
>
>
>And can you tweet a new full official count as soon as possible after
>you receive the file from us?
>
>
>
>Updating the number on the docket page itself–or placing a static note
>there–would be ideal, but I imagine that’s more complicated. Twitter is
>probably simplest.
>
>
>
>Thanks!
>—Holmes
>
>
>On Sep 11, 2014, at 10:02 AM, Gigi Sohn <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>Thanks!
>
>
>
>From: David
> Segal [mailto:(b) (6) ]
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:12 AM
>To: Gigi Sohn
>Cc: Holmes Wilson; David Bray; Sagar Doshi; Marvin Ammori
>([email protected]); Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart
>Subject: Re: Comments sent to
>[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>
>
>
>Thanks so much, Gigi. Comments are going to keep streaming in over the
>next several days -- and we know that among others, Daily Kos and CREDO
>have both collected many more in the last 24 hours, as have several
>major sites that have created their own tools. Those will come in
>separately from ours.
>
>
>
>
>-David
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 7:05 AM, Gigi Sohn <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>Holmes - again, we really appreciate your efforts yesterday and today.
>We would do anything for a modern comment filing system - but that's up
>to Congress! I'm looping in Shannon and Kim, our two top press folks so
>that they are in the loop.
>
>Let us know when all of your comments have been submittted. Thanks again.
>Gigi
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Holmes Wilson [(b) (6) ]
>
>Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 11:49 PM Eastern Standard Time
>To: Gigi Sohn
>Cc: David Bray; David Segal; Sagar Doshi; Marvin Ammori
>([email protected])
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected] Hi gigi, david and
>sagar, Just a note that we've got 500k or so more comments that were
>held up by server issues today (We shut down our tools because the fcc
>site was failing under pressure from other traffic).
>It would be great if you could pass press on to us for the real number.
>Thanks!
>-Holmes
>On Sep 9, 2014 6:45 PM, "Gigi Sohn" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>Thanks so much to all of you for your efforts. We'll do our best and
>keep our fingers crossed too! I'll be out of town tomorrow, but will be
>checking emails,and David and Sagar will be at your service.
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Holmes Wilson [(b) (6) ]
>Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 06:42 PM Eastern Standard Time
>To: Marvin Ammori
>Cc: Gigi Sohn; David Segal; David Bray; Sagar Doshi
>Subject: Re: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>Hi everyone (hi Gigi!)–
>
>
>
>
>We’re excited to break records tomorrow for public participation in the
>FCC’s process!
>
>
>
>
>Our site is smoothing out the volume of comments so there won’t be the
>same spikes as there would be if we linked people directly to your site.
>That should help a lot.
>
>
>
>
>
>Our biggest focus right now is making sure everyone’s comments get
>submitted and counted. Our developer will be extremely busy tomorrow,
>but if you have any site problems let us know, and I’ll make it a top
>priority for him.
>
>
>
>
>
>Thanks!
>
>
>—Holmes
>
>
>
>
>On Sep 9, 2014, at 6:36 PM, Marvin Ammori <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>+ Holmes Wilson
>
>
>
>
>
>Hi Gigi, David, Sagar,
>
>Thank you so much for reaching.
>
>
>We agree that it would be better if the site stays up tomorrow during
>the day of action.
>
>
>
>
>
>I finally tracked down enough folks throughout the day to determine that:
>
>
>
>
>
>1) We just don't control enough of the volume to be able to guarantee
>anything at all. Other folks are doing widgets and tools, etc. and
>they're coordinating but their technology is independent.
>
>
>
>
>
>And
>
>
>
>
>
>2) We’re going to try our best to make it manageable on our end, and
>you should ping us if it goes down or there are issues.
>
>
>Ping Holmes Wilson at (b) (6)
> + David + me by email.
>
>
>
>
>
>Here's my cell phone number if you can't get through to us by email.
>(Holmes will be most useful.)
>
>
(b) (6) <tel:(b) (6) >.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>Principal
>
>
>Ammori Group <http://ammorigroup.com/>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>Principal
>
>
>Ammori Group <http://ammorigroup.com/>
>
>
>
>
>
>On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 1:30 PM, Gigi Sohn <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>David –
>
>
>
>Marvin told me that you are concerned that the FCC is undercounting the
>net neutrality comments sent [email protected]. Let me assure you
> that this is not the case. The comment count that appears on the ECFS
>page for the net neutrality docket is lower than the official count
>because many of the comments sent through the email box were put
>together in several pdfs that were then uploaded to
> the ECFS. But the official count, now 1,345, 543 (noted in today’s
>Politico MT) counts every one of those emailed comments as a separate
>comment. We’ve been really careful about being transparent about the
>real number of comments filed.
>
>
>
>I’ve included the FCC’s CIO David Bray, and the Chairman’s Special
>Assistant Sagar Doshi, who are deeply involved in this.
>
>As I’m sure Marvin has told you, it would be far better both for us and
>for the folks you are encouraging to file if they would do so through the
>email address. We’d prefer if folks weren’t frustrated in their
>attempts to file comments,
> and we hope you feel the same.
>
>
>
>Many thanks, and we’d be happy to answer any questions or address other
>concerns. Best, Gigi
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
From: Gigi Sohn
To: Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart; David Bray; Brittany Stevenson; Stephanie Weiner; Erik Scheibert; Lamar
Robertson; Sagar Doshi; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun; Meribeth
McCarrick; Deanna Stephens; Mark Wigfield
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Date: Thursday, September 11, 2014 6:09:28 PM
Attachments: Comment QA 9 11EDITED+gbs.docx
Attached is a first cut at questions and answers. Please provide feedback ASAP. We are receiving
questions we need to answer.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 4:24 PM
To: Brittany Stevenson; Stephanie Weiner; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson;
Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun;
Meribeth McCarrick; Deanna Stephens; Mark Wigfield
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Thanks, all.
Kim is going to start an additional QA based on the past 24 hours.
From: Brittany Stevenson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 4:22 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Stephanie Weiner; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Sagar
Doshi; Kim Hart; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun;
Meribeth McCarrick; Deanna Stephens; Mark Wigfield
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Great
From: Brittany Stevenson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 4:03 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Stephanie Weiner; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Sagar
Doshi; Kim Hart; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun;
Meribeth McCarrick; Deanna Stephens; Mark Wigfield
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Will d. Then I will post the blog to fcc.gov & send the team the link once it is live.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 4:00 PM
To: Stephanie Weiner; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart;
Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun;
Brittany Stevenson; Meribeth McCarrick; Deanna Stephens; Mark Wigfield
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
With a few spacing issues fixed. Brittany, can you add erik’s links and hyperlink to the old blog post?
We need to get this out ASAP.
From: Stephanie Weiner
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:58 PM
To: David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart;
Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun;
Brittany Stevenson; Meribeth McCarrick; Deanna Stephens
Subject: Re: Comments sent to [email protected]
I'm good.
From: David Bray
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:55 PM
To: Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Sagar Doshi; Kim
Hart; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun;
Brittany Stevenson; Meribeth McCarrick; Deanna Stephens
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Thank you,
Erik
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 03:49 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Erik Scheibert; Sagar
Doshi; Kim Hart; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin
Laun; Brittany Stevenson; Meribeth McCarrick; Deanna Stephens
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
With a title.
David, instead of adding your modifier, I think we should just hyperlink to the old blog that did a deep dive on this
on the word "system".
Adding others on blog capabilities. Are we good to go as soon as Erik provides the links?
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:43 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart;
Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Also, we need to get you the links to CSV template and instructions -- unless the blogs permit a direct download?
Good to go otherwise.
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:39 PM
To: Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Tony
Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Attached is the final from an OMR/OGC perspective. Team IT, are you good?
-----Original Message-----
From: Stephanie Weiner
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:38 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Tony
Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:36 PM
To: Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner; Tony
Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
All,
-----Original Message-----
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:32 PM
To: Lamar Robertson; David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner;
Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Looks great - I would just change "this" to "the" in the first sentence. G
-----Original Message-----
From: Lamar Robertson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:30 PM
To: David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Gigi Sohn; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner; Tony
Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
One additional minor tweak. We had the word "comment" three times in two sentences so I deleted one.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:28 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner;
Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Looks great to me, we are preparing the URL for the CSV template and instructions now.
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:26 PM
To: Erik Scheibert; David Bray; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner; Tony
Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
Revised
-----Original Message-----
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:24 PM
To: David Bray; Gigi Sohn; Lamar Robertson; Shannon Gilson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner; Tony
Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
Subject: Re: Comments sent to [email protected]
Based on our conversation we will post the csv file and an instruction file and give you the URLs shorly.
Thank you,
Erik
---
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
445 Twelfth Street SW.
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-1248
>I also wouldn’t talk about our systems or the strain – here’s a shorter
>version.
>
>
>Erik, can we create a webpage with the CSV and instructions for the
>blog to link to?
>
>
>Many thanks,
>
>
>-d.
>
>
>From: Gigi Sohn
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:09 PM
>To: Lamar Robertson; David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart;
>Stephanie Weiner; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith;
>CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Please, we should not put out any numbers at all.
>
>
>From: Lamar Robertson
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:06 PM
>To: David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie
>Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Kris Monteith;
>CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>FCC history was made yesterday. The Commission has now received more
>than
>1.47 million comments as part of our Open Internet proceeding, breaking
>the record set after Janet Jackson’s infamous halftime performance at
>the 2004 Super Bowl. The volume of public feedback in this proceeding
>has been commensurate with the importance of this effort to preserve a
>free and open Internet.
>
>The new mark was set thanks in part to a coordinated effort yesterday
>to get Internet freedom supporters to express their views with the
>Commission. The high-volume of comments driven by this national
>campaign overwhelmed the Commission’s IT networks at times. As a
>result, we have not been able to fully process all of the comments
>submitted yesterday.
>
>
>The Commission is working to ensure that they are processed and that we
>have a full accounting of the number of comments received as soon as
>possible. Most important, commenters should know that all of these
>comments will be reviewed and considered as part of the rulemaking
>process.
>
>
>Of course, this proceeding remains open, and we expect another surge of
>public input as we approach the deadline for reply comments in the
>coming days. In the Commission’s embrace of Open Data and a commitment
>to openness and transparency throughout the Open Internet proceedings,
>the FCC would like to make available a Common Separated Values (CSV)
>file for bulk upload of comments given the exceptional interest in
>providing comments.
> All comments will be received and recorded through the same process we
>are applying for the [email protected] emails.
>
>
>Attached is a link to the CSV file template along with instructions.
>Once completed, the CSV file can be emailed to [email protected]
>where if it matches the template the individual comments will be filed
>for the public record with the Electronic Comment Filing System. For
>import, we encourage CSV files of 9MB or less via email.
>
>The bottom line is that the Commission welcomes the record-setting
>level of public input in this proceeding, and we want to do everything
>we can to make sure everyone’s voice are heard and reflected in the
>public record.
>
>
>From: David Bray
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 2:13 PM
>To: Shannon Gilson; Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn;
>Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Lamar Robertson; Kris
>Monteith; CGBreformleads; Dustin Laun
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Draft Blog Post language – IT will work with CGB to establish a way of
>ingesting the CSV files received via [email protected]
>
>In the Commission’s embrace of Open Data and a commitment to openness
>and transparency throughout the Open Internet proceedings, the FCC
>would like to make available a Common Separated Values (CSV) file for
>bulk upload of comments given the exceptional interest in providing
>comments. All comments will be received and recorded through the same
>process we are applying for the [email protected] emails.
>
>
>Here is a link to the CSV file template along with instructions. Once
>completed, the CSV file can be emailed to [email protected] where if
>it matches the template the individual comments will be filed for the
>public record with the Electronic Comment Filing System. For import, we
>encourage CSV files of 9MB or less via email.
>
>Fields:
>
>
>Proceeding Number -> Which proceeding you want it filed against, note:
>the Open Internet proceeding is 14-28.
>
>Name of Filer -> Who is the person that is giving the comments
>(Required) Email Address -> The email address of the filer (Optional)
>
>Address Line 1 -> Address (Required)
>Address Line 2 -> Address (Optional)
>City -> City (Required)
>State -> State (Required) Would prefer to the Valid 2 letter code for
>the state.
>Zip -> Zip (Required)
>+4 -> +4 (Optional)
>Date Received -> The date you want reflected in ECFS the filing was
>received (Business Day only) (Required) If missing will be set to the
>date the CSV file was received)
>
>Comment -> The text of the comment to be submitted (Required)
>
>Values that will be set upon import into ECFS:
>
>Filing Type -> COMMENT
>Brief Indicator -> Yes
>Filed From -> X Express
>
>
>
>From: Shannon Gilson
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:54 PM
>To: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn;
>Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Lamar Robertson
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>We are discussing next steps on a call shortly. Thanks.
>
>
>From: Sagar Doshi
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:53 PM
>To: Kim Hart; Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn;
>Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Lamar Robertson
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Do we need to wait for a blog post at 3pm to give them our template?
>Can we not agree that we’ll get a blog post out today to cover our
>legal obligations, and in the meantime get Holmes the template so they
>can start filling it out?
>
>Timing is critical in my mind, so unless there’s a reason to hold back,
>I’d be in favor of getting them the form ASAP.
>
>Sagar
>
>
>From: Kim Hart
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:48 PM
>To: Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Tony
>Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero; Lamar
>Robertson
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>All, just as an FYI, they put out this press release. Note the
>highlighted portion.
>
>For Immediate Release: 11 September 2014
>Contact: Christina DiPasquale, 202.716.1953,
>[email protected]
>**NOTE: The volume of comments overwhelmed the FCC’s servers during the
>slowdown. Fight for the Future is in contact with the FCC’s tech team
>and is working out a solution to ensure that every comment is filed
>properly.** The Internet Slowdown by the Numbers Day of protest
>generates nearly 300,000 calls and more than 2 million emails to
>Congress; 722,364 people filed comments at the FCC WASHINGTON – On
>Wednesday, tech companies, websites, public interest organizations and
>Internet users joined forces to demonstrate overwhelming support for
>stronger Net Neutrality protections.
>Participants in the Internet Slowdown added a spinning icon
>representing a slow-loading Internet to their sites. Millions of
>people clicked through the icon to a series of actions to members of
>Congress, the White House and the FCC.
>Demand Progress, Engine Advocacy, Fight for the Future and the Free
>Press Action Fund organized the Internet Slowdown. The Battle for the
>Net website featuring updates and actions is
>www.battleforthenet.com/sept10th
><http://www.battleforthenet.com/sept10th>.
>Here are the numbers from the Internet Slowdown:
>Calls made to Congress: 286,192
>Emails sent to Congress: 2,167,092
>Comments filed at the FCC: 722,364
>Calls per minute to Congress (during peak hours from 11 a m. to 3 p m.):
>1,000
>Participating websites: more than 10,000 Facebook shares of spinning
>icon: more than 1,120,000 These numbers are valid as of 10 p.m. Eastern
>time on Wednesday. The final tally on Wednesday's action will be
>provided at https://www.battleforthenet.com/.
>“The numbers tell the story: People everywhere are using the Internet
>to save the Internet from phone and cable companies,” said Fight for
>the Future Campaign Director Evan Greer. “We've shown that the best way
>to fight these powerful special interests in Washington is through
>mass action by people from outside Washington. The FCC and Congress can
>no longer dismiss the overwhelming consensus of public support for real
>Net Neutrality protections.
>"The Internet Slowdown was the biggest day of online activism since the
>Internet Blackout of 2012, when people rejected the SOPA and PIPA
>copyright bills," said Demand Progress Executive Director David Segal.
>"As the FCC decision on Net
> Neutrality approaches, Internet users will continue to speak out in
>numbers and with a message that will be impossible to ignore."
>“Internet users spoke out loud and clear on Wednesday," said Free Press
>Action Fund President and CEO Craig Aaron. “They're united against FCC
>Chairman Tom Wheeler's plan to allow fast and slow lanes on the Internet.
>The chairman must now
> listen to the public, abandon his pay-to-play plan, and pursue the
>best and only path to real Net Neutrality protections -- by
>reclassifying Internet service providers as common carriers."
>###
>
>
>From: Shannon Gilson
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:43 PM
>To: David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Tony Summerlin; Erik
>Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew
>DelNero; Lamar Robertson
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Adding Lamar. Let’s aim to have a draft of a blog post no later than 3.
>
>
>From: David Bray
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:39 PM
>To: Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik
>Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>One item to note – CSVs can allow for easy duplication of comments
>(i.e., write one comment, cut and paste 1 million times).
>
>
>Should we say anything in the blog post that “All comments will be
>received and recorded through the same process we are applying for the
>[email protected] emails” – which, I hope, would mean scanning for
>duplicates or non-relevant comments?
>
>
>From: Stephanie Weiner
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:35 PM
>To: David Bray; Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik
>Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>(David, sorry I missed this email where you clearly laid out that your
>team would send a template, rather than us just receiving a .CSV file).
>
>All,
>
>OGC feels that the .CSV approach is certainly a reasonable way to help
>prevent ECFS problems due to high volume while ensuring that interested
>parties can submit their comments to the agency.
>
>However, there is an issue related to appearance and whether this would
>be perceived as providing special treatment to one organization. To
>guard against this, we would recommend some kind of public statement
>either (1) publishing the template or (2) making it know that this
>avenue is available upon
>request. This could be done through a public notice, but could also be
>done via a blog or web posting – as we did for the email in box.
>
>I will be on the call at 2:30 to discuss further.
>
>Stephanie
>
>
>From: David Bray
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 11:55 AM
>To: Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik
>Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Just to confirm:
>
>
>·
>Erik will email to the group a .CSV template they can use to put all
>their comment in… as long as they’re in ECFS by the time the FCC makes
>a decision on the matter we’re okay.
>
>·
>We will not advertise that the FCC doing this (?) however if anyone
>else asks, we will provide the same .CSV file (alternatively we could
>make the CSV file available for download as a blog post)
>
>·
>I’m not sure we need to the problems, once received we quickly can
>verify the number of comments they have in their CSV file and update
>the daily total to include it, with the expectation they will be
>ingested by ECFS?
>
>Is this the plan? Just wanted to check. Many thanks all.
>
>
>-d.
>
>
>From: Stephanie Weiner
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 11:51 AM
>To: Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Tony Summerlin; Erik
>Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero
>Subject: Re: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>This is fine. No legal issue so long as the submissions are put into
>the official record (ECFS) by the time the FCC makes a decision on the
>matter.
>
>
>
>We should make sure the tweets are accurate of course.
>
>
>
>Stephanie
>
>
>
>From:
>Gigi Sohn
>
>Sent:
>Thursday, September 11, 2014 11:38 AM
>
>To:
>Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>
>Cc:
>Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew DelNero;
>Stephanie Weiner
>
>Subject:
>RE: Comments sent to
>[email protected]
>
>
>
>I am very much in favor of trying to accommodate them as much as we can
>since they were so accommodating of us yesterday. Can we get a sense
>from OGC ASAP
> about whether David and Tony’s idea is kosher?
>
>From: Shannon Gilson
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 10:55 AM
>To: David Bray; Gigi Sohn; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Matthew
>DelNero; Stephanie Weiner
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Adding others.
>
>
>From: David Bray
>
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 10:41 AM
>To: Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>
>
>Tony and I were talking - and if the FCC legally is okay with just
>emailing this group the template - that is also an option.
>
>We will stand-by for instruction.
>
>In the interim -- Erik can you ask your team to produce a CSV template
>of the fields that mirror ECFS and would permit easy ingest? We will
>have this ready if needed.
>
>Many thanks.
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: David Bray
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 10:33 AM Eastern Standard Time
>To: Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>*store* CSV files (autocorrect type below)
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: David Bray
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 10:32 AM Eastern Standard Time
>To: Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Erik Scheibert
>Cc: Sagar Doshi; Kim Hart; ITleadership; Charles Aaron
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>Internal FCC Only
>
>We have a license for Box.com -- similar to DropBox -- that we could
>announce today for everyone to stop CSV files if they want and that the
>CSV files will be ingested if they follow the proscribed template.
>
>We would have to specify the template. It could mirror ECFS's fields.
>We could publish the template and allow anyone to download it and put
>it into the Box location.
>
>We would say only CSV files will be ingested and only if they follow
>the template.
>
>Thoughts?
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Holmes Wilson (b) (6) ]
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 10:26 AM Eastern Standard Time
>To: Gigi Sohn
>Cc: David Segal; David Bray; Sagar Doshi; Marvin Ammori
>([email protected]); Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart
>Subject: Re: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>Hi Gigi–
>
>
>So, the latest on the FCC site is that it was just going up and down
>for us all night. We weren’t able to submit comments directly.
>
>
>
>I’ve got a proposal that would make it easier for all of us, but I want
>to make sure we’re on the same page about reporting the numbers, so
>that press doesn’t get thrown off or given bad numbers by folks looking
>to minimize what happened yesterday.
>
>
>
>We can send your team a single file in the format of your choice (a
>.csv spreadsheet file is probably simplest) with the enormous number of
>comments we collected yesterday (over 700k I believe). Then we can send
>you periodic updates going forward, again in the file format of your
>choice. We’d prefer to send one file than submit emails, because
>sending large numbers of emails is has hidden complexities and is
>potentially unreliable.
>
>
>
>But if we do that, can you tweet from @fcc early today, something like:
>
>
>
>"The FCC server has had problems with the large number of comments, so
>the number on the docket website is not the official number. We’ll have
>an official number soon."
>
>
>
>And can you tweet a new full official count as soon as possible after
>you receive the file from us?
>
>
>
>Updating the number on the docket page itself–or placing a static note
>there–would be ideal, but I imagine that’s more complicated. Twitter is
>probably simplest.
>
>
>
>Thanks!
>—Holmes
>
>
>On Sep 11, 2014, at 10:02 AM, Gigi Sohn <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>Thanks!
>
>
>
>From: David
> Segal [mailto (b) (6) ]
>Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:12 AM
>To: Gigi Sohn
>Cc: Holmes Wilson; David Bray; Sagar Doshi; Marvin Ammori
>([email protected]); Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart
>Subject: Re: Comments sent to
>[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>
>
>
>Thanks so much, Gigi. Comments are going to keep streaming in over the
>next several days -- and we know that among others, Daily Kos and CREDO
>have both collected many more in the last 24 hours, as have several
>major sites that have created their own tools. Those will come in
>separately from ours.
>
>
>
>
>-David
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 7:05 AM, Gigi Sohn <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>Holmes - again, we really appreciate your efforts yesterday and today.
>We would do anything for a modern comment filing system - but that's up
>to Congress! I'm looping in Shannon and Kim, our two top press folks so
>that they are in the loop.
>
>Let us know when all of your comments have been submittted. Thanks again.
>Gigi
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Holmes Wilson (b) (6)
>
>Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 11:49 PM Eastern Standard Time
>To: Gigi Sohn
>Cc: David Bray; David Segal; Sagar Doshi; Marvin Ammori
>([email protected])
>Subject: RE: Comments sent to [email protected] Hi gigi, david and
>sagar, Just a note that we've got 500k or so more comments that were
>held up by server issues today (We shut down our tools because the fcc
>site was failing under pressure from other traffic).
>It would be great if you could pass press on to us for the real number.
>Thanks!
>-Holmes
>On Sep 9, 2014 6:45 PM, "Gigi Sohn" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>Thanks so much to all of you for your efforts. We'll do our best and
>keep our fingers crossed too! I'll be out of town tomorrow, but will be
>checking emails,and David and Sagar will be at your service.
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Holmes Wilson [(b) (6)
>Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 06:42 PM Eastern Standard Time
>To: Marvin Ammori
>Cc: Gigi Sohn; David Segal; David Bray; Sagar Doshi
>Subject: Re: Comments sent to [email protected]
>
>Hi everyone (hi Gigi!)–
>
>
>
>
>We’re excited to break records tomorrow for public participation in the
>FCC’s process!
>
>
>
>
>Our site is smoothing out the volume of comments so there won’t be the
>same spikes as there would be if we linked people directly to your site.
>That should help a lot.
>
>
>
>
>
>Our biggest focus right now is making sure everyone’s comments get
>submitted and counted. Our developer will be extremely busy tomorrow,
>but if you have any site problems let us know, and I’ll make it a top
>priority for him.
>
>
>
>
>
>Thanks!
>
>
>—Holmes
>
>
>
>
>On Sep 9, 2014, at 6:36 PM, Marvin Ammori <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>+ Holmes Wilson
>
>
>
>
>
>Hi Gigi, David, Sagar,
>
>Thank you so much for reaching.
>
>
>We agree that it would be better if the site stays up tomorrow during
>the day of action.
>
>
>
>
>
>I finally tracked down enough folks throughout the day to determine that:
>
>
>
>
>
>1) We just don't control enough of the volume to be able to guarantee
>anything at all. Other folks are doing widgets and tools, etc. and
>they're coordinating but their technology is independent.
>
>
>
>
>
>And
>
>
>
>
>
>2) We’re going to try our best to make it manageable on our end, and
>you should ping us if it goes down or there are issues.
>
>
>Ping Holmes Wilson at <(b) (6) >
> + David + me by email.
>
>
>
>
>
>Here's my cell phone number if you can't get through to us by email.
>(Holmes will be most useful.)
>
>
>(b) (6) <tel (b) (6) >.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>Principal
>
>
>Ammori Group <http://ammorigroup.com/>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>Principal
>
>
>Ammori Group <http://ammorigroup.com/>
>
>
>
>
>
>On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 1:30 PM, Gigi Sohn <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>David –
>
>
>
>Marvin told me that you are concerned that the FCC is undercounting the
>net neutrality comments sent [email protected]. Let me assure you
> that this is not the case. The comment count that appears on the ECFS
>page for the net neutrality docket is lower than the official count
>because many of the comments sent through the email box were put
>together in several pdfs that were then uploaded to
> the ECFS. But the official count, now 1,345, 543 (noted in today’s
>Politico MT) counts every one of those emailed comments as a separate
>comment. We’ve been really careful about being transparent about the
>real number of comments filed.
>
>
>
>I’ve included the FCC’s CIO David Bray, and the Chairman’s Special
>Assistant Sagar Doshi, who are deeply involved in this.
>
>As I’m sure Marvin has told you, it would be far better both for us and
>for the folks you are encouraging to file if they would do so through the
>email address. We’d prefer if folks weren’t frustrated in their
>attempts to file comments,
> and we hope you feel the same.
>
>
>
>Many thanks, and we’d be happy to answer any questions or address other
>concerns. Best, Gigi
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
From: Kim Hart
To: David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn
Subject: RE: Draft text for blog tomorrow (caveat: needs edits)
Date: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 1:38:51 PM
Attachments: Blog-Volume of Comments 9 16.docx
Monday night concluded the second round of comments for the FCC's Open Internet Proceeding. During
the last four months, the Commission has received a large number of comments from a wide range of
constituents via three methods: (1) the FCC’s Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS), (2) the
[email protected] email address, and (3) a recently launched CSV file option [link to blog post] for
large comment uploads.
In July, at the conclusion of the first round of comments, we provided a look [insert link to blog post] at
the daily rate of comments we received in ECFS. We are now providing an updated file [link to CSV file]
to show the rate of comments submitted to ECFS since the start of the public comment period in this
proceeding. Below is a graphical representation of this data.
(Chart)
As an alternative path to submitting feedback, the Commission has also been receiving comments to a
dedicated email inbox at [email protected]. We are providing an updated CSV text file [link to CSV
file] providing the weekly submission rates of those comments, and a graphical representation of the
data below.
(Chart)
Despite the age of the Commission’s IT systems, the FCC IT team worked around the clock to scale the
large volume of comments in order to keep the system up and running, ensuring the public could
submit feedback to the Commission leading up to Monday’s comment deadline.
The record number of comments we received on this proceeding underscores the importance of the
open Internet. We appreciate the interest and feedback from all of the individuals and groups who took
the time to provide valuable input during the last four months.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 10:25 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart; Gigi Sohn
Subject: Draft text for blog tomorrow (caveat: needs edits)
Attached is a draft blog for tomorrow -- I tried to address Gigi's concerns of not awaking the ire of
Holmes and company (he gave us kudos on twitter today). I also wrote this while riding the metro
home tonight, having read Alex Howard's article, and am probably a tad distracted from the whole day -
- so it probably needs editing and pruning. I am not wedded to the text, particularly re: what the IT
team did if you think this is not the right forum to disclose?
This Monday night concluded the second round of comments for the FCC's Open Internet Proceeding
(Proceeding 14-28). Over the last four months, the Commission held two rounds of commenting on the
issue and has received a large number of comments from a wide range of constituents via three
methods: (1) the FCC’s Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS), (2) the [email protected] email
address, and (3) a recently launched CSV file option for large comment uploads.
As previously shared in an earlier post, Chairman Tom Wheeler and I both enthusiastically support open
government and open data. This post seeks to provide an updated file with the daily this rate of
comments submitted into the FCC’s ECFS since the start of public comments on the FCC’s Open Internet
Proceeding; below is a graphical presentation of that same data.
(Chart)
By sharing the data I would also like to give kudos to the FCC team for scaling the 18-year old ECFS to
address unprecedented comment submission levels. At 1am in the morning of Tuesday, 15 July there
was a slowdown in the responsiveness of ECFS -- by 3pm that same day a creative workaround was
deployed that resolved the slowdown and enabled the large volume of submissions to continue without
interruption. Wednesday 16 July saw an unprecedented (at that time) yyy,yyy comments submitted to
ECFS without issue or disruption at a level much higher than anything ECFS had ever seen in May, June,
or to our knowledge it's entire service history.
Similarly, on Wednesday, 10 September at 6:30pm there was another slowdown in ECFS and by 9:50pm
that same evening the FCC team deployed another workaround to address another jump in the massive
scale of comments being received. That Thursday saw, without issue or disruption, a record breaking
xxx,xxx comments that trumped all other levels of comments ever seen by ECFS. If you compare the
average level of comments received in May and and June to the peaks for those two months, there's a
significant difference -- and if you compare the peaks in a May and June to the exponentially
astounding peaks in July and September, you will get a sense of what we had to address to overcome
any slowdowns with ECFS.
In addition, the Commission also has been receiving comments to the [email protected] email inbox
that was established April 24 — before the Commission adopted the Open Internet Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking on May 15, which began the official comment period in ECFS. Here’s a link to a CSV text
file providing those weekly rates and below is a graphical presentation of the data of email comments
received.
(Chart)
Lastly, as mentioned in a blog post last week we also created an additional method for uploading
comments on Open Internet using CSV files -- of which we received in raw, unprocessed form zzz,zzz by
the close of the second round of comments Monday night.
In closing, I have written about the need to modernize the FCC's IT and we have plans to do just that -
- at the same time I would like to give a heartfelt thank you to those who volunteered nights, early
mornings, and weekends to keep the FCC open for public comments from everyone on this issue. For
everyone following the public discourse, I hope you find this information useful.
From: David Bray
To: Kim Hart; Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson
Subject: RE: Draft text for blog tomorrow (caveat: needs edits)
Date: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 12:48:46 PM
Hi David,
I think it’s best to leave the additional details about the surges out in this post. The point of this is be
transparent and get our own visualizations and numbers out, which will speak for themselves. I
realize you are frustrated by some of the information out there (as am I), which is why we will offer
a post-mortem briefing to a reporter from an appropriate outlet once the dust settles, as we
discussed. Especially in light of the hearings tomorrow, I don’t want to risk raising additional
questions.
I know you do not like the shorthand used by reporters that the website crashed, but I don’t think
this is the appropriate place to try to clear that up. I believe Jon is prepared to answer questions
about this tomorrow.
I left in a paragraph explaining the good work that the IT team did to keep the system up and
running, which will help combat the idea that the website crashed. I added a line to incorporate the
workaround solutions your team put in place:
Throughout the two rounds of public comment, and despite the age of the Commission’s IT systems,
the FCC IT team worked around the clock and implemented workaround solutions to scale the large
volume of comments in order to keep the system up and running, ensuring the public could submit
feedback to the Commission leading up to Monday night’s comment deadline.
Thanks for your continued help on this.
Kim
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 3:22 PM
To: Gigi Sohn; Kim Hart; Shannon Gilson
Subject: RE: Draft text for blog tomorrow (caveat: needs edits)
Hi Gigi – it’s not misinformation with the numbers. It’s folks saying there was a website crash when
there was not, for example – or Fight for the Future saying we asked them to turn off submitting
comments on Wednesday when we did not.
If we don’t address this there may be a GAO investigation into what did FCC IT do regarding this
“crash” – when in fact none never happened?
Does this help as background? Here’s the text:
It is worth noting at 1am in the morning of Tuesday, 15 July there was a brief slowdown in the
responsiveness of ECFS – and by 3pm a creative workaround was deployed that resolved this
slowness and enabled the large volume of submissions to continue without interruption. Wednesday
16 July saw a successful surge of 152,353 comments in one day submitted to ECFS without
disruption, representing a level much higher than anything ECFS had ever seen in May, June, or to
our knowledge it's entire 18-year service history.
Thursday, 11 September also saw, without issue, a record breaking 244,374 comments received by
ECFS in one day, surpassing the previous surge in in July and representing the highest level of
comments ever received by the aging system.
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 3:04 PM
To: David Bray; Kim Hart; Shannon Gilson
Subject: RE: Draft text for blog tomorrow (caveat: needs edits)
I don't like the idea of accusing anyone of putting out misinformation. Let's just put out our
numbers as the authoritative ones.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 02:44 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Kim Hart; Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn
Subject: RE: Draft text for blog tomorrow (caveat: needs edits)
Hi Kim,
Many thanks for the edits -- minor edits plus the addition of one paragraph. I'd like to include it as there is a lot of
"misinformation" out there that's not accurate. Happy to discuss after our 1445/2:45pm conference call and see what
might or might not be possible?
Truly appreciated,
-d.
-----Original Message-----
From: Kim Hart
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 1:39 PM
To: David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn
Subject: RE: Draft text for blog tomorrow (caveat: needs edits)
An Update on the Volume of Open Internet Comments Submitted to the FCC By David Bray
Monday night concluded the second round of comments for the FCC's Open Internet Proceeding. During the last
four months, the Commission has received a large number of comments from a wide range of constituents via three
methods: (1) the FCC’s Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS), (2) the [email protected] email address,
and (3) a recently launched CSV file option [link to blog post] for large comment uploads.
In July, at the conclusion of the first round of comments, we provided a look [insert link to blog post] at the daily
rate of comments we received in ECFS. We are now providing an updated file [link to CSV file] to show the rate
of comments submitted to ECFS since the start of the public comment period in this proceeding. Below is a
graphical representation of this data.
(Chart)
As an alternative path to submitting feedback, the Commission has also been receiving comments to a dedicated
email inbox at [email protected]. We are providing an updated CSV text file [link to CSV file] providing the
weekly submission rates of those comments, and a graphical representation of the data below.
(Chart)
Despite the age of the Commission’s IT systems, the FCC IT team worked around the clock to scale the large
volume of comments in order to keep the system up and running, ensuring the public could submit feedback to the
Commission leading up to Monday’s comment deadline.
The record number of comments we received on this proceeding underscores the importance of the open Internet.
We appreciate the interest and feedback from all of the individuals and groups who took the time to provide
valuable input during the last four months.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 10:25 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart; Gigi Sohn
Subject: Draft text for blog tomorrow (caveat: needs edits)
Attached is a draft blog for tomorrow -- I tried to address Gigi's concerns of not awaking the ire of Holmes and
company (he gave us kudos on twitter today). I also wrote this while riding the metro home tonight, having read
Alex Howard's article, and am probably a tad distracted from the whole day -- so it probably needs editing and
pruning. I am not wedded to the text, particularly re: what the IT team did if you think this is not the right forum to
disclose?
This Monday night concluded the second round of comments for the FCC's Open Internet Proceeding (Proceeding
14-28). Over the last four months, the Commission held two rounds of commenting on the issue and has received a
large number of comments from a wide range of constituents via three methods: (1) the FCC’s Electronic Comment
Filing System (ECFS), (2) the [email protected] email address, and (3) a recently launched CSV file option for
large comment uploads.
As previously shared in an earlier post, Chairman Tom Wheeler and I both enthusiastically support open
government and open data. This post seeks to provide an updated file with the daily this rate of comments
submitted into the FCC’s ECFS since the start of public comments on the FCC’s Open Internet Proceeding; below
is a graphical presentation of that same data.
(Chart)
By sharing the data I would also like to give kudos to the FCC team for scaling the 18-year old ECFS to address
unprecedented comment submission levels. At 1am in the morning of Tuesday, 15 July there was a slowdown in the
responsiveness of ECFS -- by 3pm that same day a creative workaround was deployed that resolved the slowdown
and enabled the large volume of submissions to continue without interruption. Wednesday 16 July saw an
unprecedented (at that time) yyy,yyy comments submitted to ECFS without issue or disruption at a level much
higher than anything ECFS had ever seen in May, June, or to our knowledge it's entire service history.
Similarly, on Wednesday, 10 September at 6:30pm there was another slowdown in ECFS and by 9:50pm that same
evening the FCC team deployed another workaround to address another jump in the massive scale of comments
being received. That Thursday saw, without issue or disruption, a record breaking xxx,xxx comments that trumped
all other levels of comments ever seen by ECFS. If you compare the average level of comments received in May
and and June to the peaks for those two months, there's a significant difference -- and if you compare the peaks in a
May and June to the exponentially astounding peaks in July and September, you will get a sense of what we had to
address to overcome any slowdowns with ECFS.
In addition, the Commission also has been receiving comments to the [email protected] email inbox that was
established April 24 — before the Commission adopted the Open Internet Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on May
15, which began the official comment period in ECFS. Here’s a link to a CSV text file providing those weekly
rates and below is a graphical presentation of the data of email comments received.
(Chart)
Lastly, as mentioned in a blog post last week we also created an additional method for uploading comments on
Open Internet using CSV files -- of which we received in raw, unprocessed form zzz,zzz by the close of the second
round of comments Monday night.
In closing, I have written about the need to modernize the FCC's IT and we have plans to do just that -- at the same
time I would like to give a heartfelt thank you to those who volunteered nights, early mornings, and weekends to
keep the FCC open for public comments from everyone on this issue. For everyone following the public discourse,
I hope you find this information useful.
From: Brittany Stevenson
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Kim Hart; Mark Wigfield; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn
Subject: Re: FFF blog
Date: Friday, September 12, 2014 8:59:17 PM
2hrs ago.
Brittany L. Stevenson
Federal Communications Commission
New Media Associate
[email protected]
O: 202-418-8204 C: 202-560-8795
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 8:48 PM
To: Brittany Stevenson
Cc: Kim Hart; Mark Wigfield; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn
Subject: Re: FFF blog
How long ago was the tweet about the incorrect numbers?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Brittany Stevenson
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 8:30 PM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Kim Hart; Mark Wigfield; Neil Grace
Subject: Re: FFF blog
@PopularResistance
Did you see signs of the #InternetSlowDown yesterday? Check out how big of an impact it
had! popularresistance.org/the-internetsl… pic.twitter.com/j3QnBNeayN
@schachin
#InternetSlowdown 's Mindblowing Numbers! (really) > This is why your Internet is slow....
#NetNeutrality pic.twitter.com/9S13rtQcrK
@fightfortheftr
UPDATE: the #InternetSlowdown was even bigger than we thought! We break down the
numbers here: tumblr.fightforthefuture.org/post/973253170… pic.twitter.com/Fb5cDG14K0
@vanschewick
The #InternetSlowdown was even bigger than originally reported. Updated numbers from
@fightfortheftr: tumblr.fightforthefuture.org/post/973253170… #NetNeutrality
@fightfortheftr
.@FCC gave incorrect numbers to reporters regarding comments from #InternetSlowdown.
We asked them to correct this publicly. Still waiting.
@fightfortheftr
The #InternetSlowdown was bigger than we ever imagined. Take a look at the numbers.
tumblr.fightforthefuture.org/post/973253170… pic.twitter.com/94iPbmM0f7
@TimKarr
Updated nos. on #InternetSlowdown day: - FCC Comments 722,364 - Emails to Congress
2,167,092 - Calls to Congress 303,099 - Websites 40,000
@MedDemFund
@ForEffectiveGov
Wow! #InternetSlowdown day generated 1,000 calls per minute to Congress. bit.ly/1tGVrrb
@TimKarr
FCC: Our system still "catching up with the surge of public comments' from the
#InternetSlowdown: fcc.gov/blog/additiona… #NetNeutrality
@notcraigaaron
#FF actual organizers of #InternetSlowdown @fightfortheftr @demandprogress @EngineOrg
and @freepress
Best,
Brittany L. Stevenson
Federal Communications Commission
New Media Associate
[email protected]
O: 202-418-8204 C: 202-560-8795
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 7:00 PM
To: Brittany Stevenson
Cc: Kim Hart; Mark Wigfield; Neil Grace
Subject: FW: FFF blog
I thought they stopped on their own because they saw that our system wasn't responding under
the load.
^^ You are correct Kim. We did not ask them to stop sending their files. They emailed us that they
chose to because they saw a strain (and as it is, it wasn’t them – there were other variables + actors
adding to the strain).
From: Kim Hart
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 7:08 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn; Mark Wigfield; Neil Grace; David Bray
Subject: Re: FFF blog
Gigi and David:
It says below that the FCC asked them to stop sending us files until our system came back online. Is
that true? I thought they stopped on their own because they saw that our system wasn't responding
under the load.
Kim
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 6:43 PM
To: Gigi Sohn; Kim Hart; Mark Wigfield; Neil Grace; David Bray
Subject: FFF blog
Fyi - the surge in Open Internet emails probably were the international OI comments from this group -
they started sending them at 0100/1am this morning. The group already indicated on Friday they had
sent all their U.S.-based ones as CSV files.
The group shared the blog post with other groups so we may get some additional CSV files on Monday
from others.
Hi Jeff,
Sounds good, ECFS has email addresses as an optional field. For emails received at
[email protected], we'll use a program to redact email addresses too, so no need to resend and
from our latest counts I believe they all came through.
Let me know when you're in D.C., always enjoy a HH with a diverse group of perspectives because our
rapidly changing world needs many different views as we work to "keep up" with the change.
-d.
David,
Just a heads up -- we're about to start emailing the international comments. We are not
including the commenters' email addresses with this, because we were concerned they would
end up publicly searchable (should be private). Let me know if you have a way of filtering
these out on your end, and we can resend with the commenter address in the body. I noticed
it wasn't a required field, so I'm hoping this will suffice.
Also, it would be cool you up on happy hour next time I'm in DC!
Thanks,
Jeff Lyon
(b) (6)
On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 3:37 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
:-) We’ve got Mongo and Redis for some of our other more modern systems, agreed they both
rock (… that said: not an official government endorsement…).
Here’s an application using Mongo and Redis and developed by the FCC when we had the funds:
http://www.broadbandmap.gov/technology
If you all are ever up for an informal happy hour outside of work, happy to get together in D.C.
With highest regards,
-d.
From: Chris Antaki [mailto:(b) (6) ]
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 6:36 PM
To: David Bray
Cc: Jeff Lyon; OpenInternet; Erik Scheibert; Tiffiniy cheng; Holmes Wilson
- Chris
On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 3:25 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
All files received Jeff and unzipped – many thanks for sending and working with us. Hopefully after
this is all over we’ll also get the FY15 budget to finally replace this 18 year old system!
Wishing you a great weekend as well,
-d.
From: Jeff Lyon [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 5:05 PM
To: OpenInternet; David Bray
Cc: Erik Scheibert; Chris Antaki; Tiffiniy cheng; Holmes Wilson
I just sent through three 7zip CSV archives. It should have the most current data for our
US-only 14-28 comment submissions. We'll be working on emailing the International ones
and get those to you next week.
Thanks very much for your assistance, and for helping us get all these comments to you in
bulk. We really appreciate it.
Jeff
On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Jeff Lyon <[email protected]> wrote:
Hello,
Here is the first file. It's an encrypted 7zip archive with fifty 9mb CSV files inside. We a
lot more to send, but wanted to confirm this was working first.
Thanks,
Jeff
On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 9:10 AM, Holmes Wilson (b) (6) > wrote:
Understood. We'll send using 7zip, which allows us to password protect.
What is the best number to call you at? We legally are constrained as anything we provide
to you we have to provide the public. As you can imagine posting the URL to a box.com
account directly to the web would get a lot more files beyond CSV files -- and be the target
of spam.
So the best approach would be to email the files and separate relay by email, telephone, or
some other mechanism the password of your own choosing for the files.
My number is 202.418.2020
-d.
-----Original Message-----
From: Holmes Wilson [(b) (6) ]
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 10:51 AM Eastern Standard Time
To: Erik Scheibert
Cc: David Bray; Jeff Lyon; Chris Antaki; Tiffiniy cheng
Subject: Re: How to CSV submit battleforthenet.com
I just noticed that the bullets in the email might seem strange :) There were a few other
considerations after #1, but I left them out for now without revising the first part of my
email!
More soon...
Thanks,
-H
On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 10:49 AM, Holmes Wilson (b) (6) > wrote:
Hi everyone–
We have our first file ready. How should we send it? Some considerations:
1) The file is small enough that we could send in two 9mb attachments. But we can't send
folks' email addresses in the clear over the Internet, so what's your preferred method for
securing these, of the following options?
- Dropbox, box.com, google drive, or any other service where we can share with a specific
email address works.
- A 7zip email attachment is easy; can you install that on your machines?
- GPG works if you provide us with your public key.
- We could also provide you a password-protected URL and give you the password out of
band (by phone e.g.) but that's more of a pain.
Note that this first chunk isn't everything we have. There's a second file we're working on
preparing now. Will there be an official number going up today? If so, please give us the
deadline for getting comments included in that official number.
Thanks!
--Holmes
On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 5:19 PM, Erik Scheibert <[email protected]> wrote:
Utf-8 if possible.
If it helps you can send us a sample and we will test it in our UAT environment.
Erik
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 05:15 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: 'Jeff Lyon'
Cc: 'Holmes Wilson'; 'Chris Antaki'; Erik Scheibert; 'Tiffiniy cheng'
Subject: RE: How to CSV submit battleforthenet.com
Also, if you use Excel or a similar spreadsheet program and tell it to save the spreadsheet as a CSV,
it should work well.
Calling now.
From: David Bray
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 5:15 PM
To: 'Jeff Lyon'
Cc: Holmes Wilson; Chris Antaki; Erik Scheibert; Tiffiniy cheng
Subject: RE: How to CSV submit battleforthenet.com
Hi Jeff,
I’ll give you a call –
1. If the is a date and it is a non-business day, it will be bucketed for the next available business
day.
2. We’ll only use commas a the delimiter, so what you can do is put the entire field in quotation
marks “Dear Sir, I think that we should do A, B, C.” that will incorporate it all. If you have quotation
marks, if they’re double quotations that will also import. A line break for each field is nice.
3. Also long as commas are the delimiter, you should be okay.
Attached is an example,
-d.
From: Jeff Lyon [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 4:57 PM
To: David Bray
Cc: Holmes Wilson; Chris Antaki; Erik Scheibert; Tiffiniy cheng
Subject: Re: How to CSV submit battleforthenet.com
Thanks David,
I think we will have to mail DVD(s). All the comments definitely won't fit on one CD.
The instructions mention that date submitted must be a business day, however we are
collecting comments all the time, and your online comment form accepts these on
non-business days. How will you process CSV entries listed on non-business days?
Will they be rejected, or be bucketed into the next available business day?
The instructions don't mention how to escape characters like commas and line breaks.
(ie. if there's a comma in our comment, it would break the CSV format without some
type of escape entity) Different parsing engines have different rules regarding special
characters and escaping, so we want to make sure we are formatting correctly. Can
you clarify this for us? It would help to see an example file where the comment is
pre-filled with commas and line breaks escaped the way you expect to parse them.
What character encoding should the CSV file be specified in? We've seen a lot of
submissions with special unicode characters and want to make sure you can handle
these.
Thanks in advance for any clarification on these points. Please feel free to call if you would
like to discuss. (b) (6)
Thanks!
Jeff Lyon
On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 1:45 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Holmes,
I’ll be available throughout the day and night, as will Erik (copied here). There are two options, you
can chunk the CSV into parts or mail us a CD of the file if it’s really big.
Hope this helps,
-d.
From: Holmes Wilson [mailto:(b) (6) ]
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 4:44 PM
To: David Bray; Jeff Lyon; Chris Antaki
Cc: Tiffiniy cheng
Subject: How to CSV submit battleforthenet.com
Hi David–
Gigi suggested I touch base with you about how to submit. Jeff and Chris have worked on
data collection and the submission script.
I wanted to connect you because I think it's likely our CSV will be bigger than 9MB (too
fried to do the math :)
Jeff and Chris– here are the instructions the FCC is providing. Can you work with David to
make sure they get all our comments? http://www.fcc.gov/blog/additional-option-filing-
open-internet-comments
Also, guys– how would you all like to handle the question of comments that were already
submitted? I don't want there to be any questions about the full count, but I also don't want
to risk leaving out any comments. Also, David, when will you and your team be available
until, today? I realize it's getting late in the day.
Thank you!
–Holmes
--
Jeff Lyon
Director of Code Activism
Fight for the Future
https://fightforthefuture.org
--
Jeff Lyon
Director of Code Activism
Fight for the Future
https://fightforthefuture.org
--
Jeff Lyon
Director of Code Activism
Fight for the Future
https://fightforthefuture.org
--
Jeff Lyon
Director of Code Activism
Fight for the Future
https://fightforthefuture.org
--
Jeff Lyon
Director of Code Activism
Fight for the Future
https://fightforthefuture.org
--
Jeff Lyon
Director of Code Activism
Fight for the Future
https://fightforthefuture.org
--
Jeff Lyon
Director of Code Activism
Fight for the Future
https://fightforthefuture.org
From: Gigi Sohn
To: Diane Cornell; David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Jon Wilkins
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Charles Aaron
Subject: RE: Just passed 200,000 comments
Date: Friday, September 12, 2014 8:49:50 AM
-----Original Message-----
From: Diane Cornell
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 10:20 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn; Jon Wilkins
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Charles Aaron
Subject: RE: Just passed 200,000 comments
-----Original Message-----
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 09:10 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: David Bray
Subject: Just passed 200,000 comments
Erik
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Information Technology Center
Office: TW-A626F
Phone: (202) 418-1248
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Diane Cornell
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: David Bray; Tony Summerlin; Gigi Sohn
Subject: RE: List of comments due
Date: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 11:58:28 AM
Will try, do you really need everything? that’s a new data call…
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 11:54 AM
To: Diane Cornell
Cc: David Bray; Tony Summerlin; Gigi Sohn
Subject: RE: List of comments due
I need to get the Chairman a list of everything that is due this week and we should anticipate
through the end of the comment period. Can you send me your list by 3?
From: Diane Cornell
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 11:53 AM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: David Bray; Tony Summerlin; Gigi Sohn
Subject: RE: List of comments due
Although e rate comments ARE due I gather on Monday the 15 th , so if there are any residual issues
by then it’s worth being aware of…
From: Diane Cornell
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 11:51 AM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: David Bray; Tony Summerlin; Gigi Sohn
Subject: RE: List of comments due
I have only gotten one response from the bureaus (and I had asked them for feedback immediately if
there were any major comments due), and that bureau said nothing major this week.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 10:36 AM
To: Diane Cornell
Subject: List of comments due
Diane,
Do you have the list of all comments due this week in anticipation of ECFS going down?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Michael Carowitz
To: Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew
Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Kimberly Wild
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Date: Thursday, September 11, 2014 4:12:32 PM
4pm numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Tuesday, Sept 9 7520 492,443 40,126 911,252 1,403,695
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107
1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
(2:00) 123,525 669,668 91,123 1,139,221
1,808,889
(4:00) 139,063 685,206 93,539 1,141,637 1,826,843
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:00 PM
To: Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric
Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Here’s the chart Kim provided, moved up to the top of the email chain for your quick reference. Thanks.
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Tuesday, Sept 9 7520 492,443 40,126 911,252 1,403,695
Per David, we’ve received 70,175 comments in ECFS so far today. I will schedule a call for 10 a.m. so the team
can get an update on what we are seeing and the plan for today.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:27 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Good morning. Can we get yesterday's total?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:40 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107
1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:34 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Can we get the latest numbers?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Here are the numbers for ECFS for last night and today -- for pasting into the table:
For 14-28:
Note that yesterday was the highest day ever for a single day of ECFS comments received.
The previous ECFS record for a single day was 153,559 on 16 July right before the close of
the first commenting period.
The viral video's supposed surge saw 15,895 for the day -- peaking in 24,895 after the ECFS
workaround was deployed on 03 June and the site operated with out issues. We're in
exponential territory.
-----Original Message-----
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 02:52 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach;
Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107
1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
(2:00) 123,525 669,668 91,123 1,139,221
1,808,889
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 12:55 PM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane
Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
I’ve filled in the chart below with the 9:30 and noon numbers for today.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 9:45 AM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane
Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
As of 9:30 today:
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI Email Total OI Email Cumulative Total
85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 8:14 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Per David, we’ve received 70,175 comments in ECFS so far today. I will schedule a call for 10 a.m. so the team
can get an update on what we are seeing and the plan for today.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:27 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Good morning. Can we get yesterday's total?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:40 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107
1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:34 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Can we get the latest numbers?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
All in one place:
As of noon
Total comments received 9/10: 73,606
Cumulative total: 1,477, 301
Of the 73,606:
ECFS: 29,177/521,620 (so far)
Mailbox: 44,429/955,681.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:36 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
OI Mailbox – 44,429 new comments as of noon, for a cumulative total of 955,681. Thanks.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:20 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Sorry, that’s 29,177 since yesterday. (I have a calculator with a bad display.)
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:18 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
The ECFS numbers as of 12 noon are at 521,620. That’s 23,111 ne comments in ECFS since
yesterday’s numbers. I’m in the process of getting the OI mailbox numbers. Thanks.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 12:58 PM
To: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Needed: Numbers Update
IT/CGB,
Can we get a numbers update as of 12:00/12:30? Are we experiencing any issues with ECFS or the mail box so
far?
As a reminder, we will need another data pull at 5:00/5:30.
Thanks,
Shannon
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received E-mails
received
All,
We have received 1 set of 75 different CSV files. More are expected.
Without processing the CSV comments for whether they will all import into ECFS, the raw count is 218,613
comments received today.
We probably should add two more columns to the table – distinct from ECFS and CSV. Erik and is team are
working on a mechanism to make sure these are not double-counted when ingested into ECFS.
Daily CSV comments Total CSV Comments
Received Received
Friday (1530/3:30pm) 218,613 218,613
For 1600/4pm, unless we send another update, assume this is the total for CSV comments received so far.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 2:15 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric
Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
2:00 pm numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Tuesday, Sept 9 7520 492,443 40,126 911,252 1,403,695
Wednesday, Sept 41,173 533,616 70,286 981,538 1,515, 144
10
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107
1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
(2:00) 123,525 669,668 91,123 1,139,221
1,808,889
(4:00) 139,063 685,206 93,539 1,141,637 1,826,843
Fri, Sept 12 (9:30) 70,523 861,035 34,344 1,175,981 2,037,016
(noon) 82,348 872,860 39,842 1,181,479 2,054,339
(2:00) 102,006 892,518 46,371 1,188,008 2,080,526
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:00 PM
To: Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric
Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Here’s the chart Kim provided, moved up to the top of the email chain for your quick reference. Thanks.
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Tuesday, Sept 9 7520 492,443 40,126 911,252 1,403,695
Wednesday, Sept 41,173 533,616 70,286 981,538 1,515, 144
10
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107
1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 12:55 PM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane
Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
I’ve filled in the chart below with the 9:30 and noon numbers for today.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 9:45 AM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane
Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
As of 9:30 today:
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI Email Total OI Email Cumulative Total
85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 8:14 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Per David, we’ve received 70,175 comments in ECFS so far today. I will schedule a call for 10 a.m. so the team
can get an update on what we are seeing and the plan for today.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:27 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Good morning. Can we get yesterday's total?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:40 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Tuesday, Sept 9 7520 492,443 40,126 911,252 1,403,695
Wednesday, Sept 41,173 533,616 70,286 981,538 1,515, 144
10
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107
1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:34 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Can we get the latest numbers?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Sure thing.
Regards,
Tony
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 8:46 AM
To: Tony Summerlin
Subject: RE: Net "Slowdown"
Thanks Tony - can I share with the larger group?
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Summerlin
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 04:42 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Gigi Sohn
Cc: Diane Cornell; David Bray
Subject: RE: Net "Slowdown"
Gigi:
The issue is actually a little more complicated than that.
I could tell you that we can accept about 5K every 60 minutes, but that would also mean that if we
got 5K all at once it may shut down.
Realistically we are in a position where the intake will turn people back as the “pipe” gets full. As we
are taking the comments as quickly as possible into a database but they will not be processed real-
time, they will be fed at a more deliberate pace after the fact.
The team has the following to offer.
What we are doing:
- Improving the statistics gathering so we are able to report at hour interval.
- Staff is available on-site and remote and weekend work is being approved.
- The administrative portion of the system can handle about 40,000 comments per day. We can
likely increase the processing to about double but that still leaves us 12 days to process 1 million
comments. Suggest posting a message or notice changing the comment visibility from 24 hours to
48 hours. Also, we may want to reach out to the law firms that sometime expect the comments to
be available within a few minutes. There is a notice saying posting will be delayed by 24 hours.
- We have additional application servers on standby that can be added to the cluster should it be
necessary. Not likely, however, as the database is likely to become the bottleneck.
That leaves us with a few scenarios:
1) Application handles the load
This case we smile and report. However, the likelihood here is low if the volumes reach the
anticipated levels.
2) The application is slow and users are intermittently seeing errors/timeouts We will monitor the
traffic and see if cache tuning is necessary. We will monitor the database and I possible do
additional performance tuning based on traffic patterns. Suggest reaching out to the community
telling users to try again if they were not successful.
3) The application becomes unavailable frequently (application/database issue)
Suggest reaching out to the community and offer [email protected] as an alternative filing
method.
Team will monitor the usage patterns and look for additional optimization.
4) The application becomes unavailable due to bandwidth Suggest reaching out to community and
offer [email protected] as an alternative filing method.
Team will move portions of outbound FCC traffic through GB if necessary.
Suggestion for the filers
- If someone have bulk comments we can work out a different delivery system (cd, file transfer, etc)
and we will upload the comments to ECFS outside the normal intake process using ETL.
- Upload no more than 200,000 per day.
- Upload at nights when the normal traffic is low.
I am sorry there is not better news. We are working as diligently as possible with what we have
available.
I will be available all the time.
Regards,
Tony
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 1:24 PM
To: David Bray; James Miller; Jonathan Sallet; Ruth Milkman; Diane Cornell; Shannon Gilson; Mark
Wigfield; Neil Grace; Kim Hart; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Eric Feigenbaum; Matthew DelNero;
Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Stevan Jechura;
Regina Black
Cc: Claude Aiken; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry
Subject: RE: Net "Slowdown"
Folks –
I talked to my contact, and he is going to see whether they can have the comments come in more
slowly. So question for the IT experts – can we approximate how many comments per hour ECFS
can handle? Thanks! Gigi
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 11:00 AM
To: David Bray; James Miller; Jonathan Sallet; Ruth Milkman; Diane Cornell; Shannon Gilson; Mark
Wigfield; Neil Grace; Kim Hart; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Eric Feigenbaum; Matthew DelNero;
Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Stevan Jechura;
Regina Black
Cc: Claude Aiken; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry
Subject: Net "Slowdown"
Folks – here is the larger list to which updates can be sent. David, you mentioned an Eric S? I can’t
seem to find him in the phone book.
So by my notes, Diane will find out what filings are due on Wed. The rapid response team will
consist of:
Gigi
Michael
Shannon
Sara
Andrew
Stephanie
Tony
I will find out whether there will be one appointed time for comments to be filed, and if so, whether
the activists might be willing to break it up a bit.
Again, if there are any other questions you’d like me to ask, let me know. G
From: Gigi Sohn
To: "Sarah McHaney"
Subject: RE: Net neutrality #s
Date: Monday, September 15, 2014 2:55:05 PM
My pleasure.
From: Sarah McHaney [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 2:55 PM
To: Gigi Sohn
Subject: RE: Net neutrality #s
Hi Gigi,
Thank you so much for this update. That is an incredible number of comments. I’ll be back in touch
as our coverage on net neutrality continues.
Thanks again,
Sarah
From: Gigi Sohn [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 2:43 PM
To: Sarah McHaney
Subject: Net neutrality #s
Hi Sara –
We just tweeted this out: “We have passed the 3 million mark for #OpenInternet comments
received. We are still receiving & processing comments. More updates to come.”
Let me know if you have any other questions. Best, Gigi
From: Shannon Gilson
To: Tom Wheeler; Ruth Milkman; Philip Verveer; Jonathan Sallet; Gigi Sohn; Stephanie Weiner
Subject: RE: Net Neutrality
Date: Thursday, September 11, 2014 11:02:45 AM
Adding Stephanie, who has confirmed anonymous comments are a part of the public record.
-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Wheeler
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 7:26 PM
To: Ruth Milkman; Philip Verveer; Jonathan Sallet; Gigi Sohn; Shannon Gilson
Subject: FW: Net Neutrality
Interesting that this new round of emails is designed to hide the person's name.
I also like the rational and respectful manner in which they persuasively make their case!
-----Original Message-----
From: <Save Net Neutrality> [mailto:(b) (6) ]
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 2:05 PM
To: Tom Wheeler
Subject: Net Neutrality
Don't let these fat cats ruin our internet, you dingo!
From: Gigi Sohn
To: Shannon Gilson; Mark Wigfield; Kim Hart; David Bray
Subject: RE: OI Comment response
Date: Monday, September 15, 2014 7:11:23 AM
Many thanks!
-----Original Message-----
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Sunday, September 14, 2014 10:51 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Mark Wigfield; Kim Hart; David Bray; Gigi Sohn
Subject: Re: OI Comment response
Hope the weekend was good for each of you. If it helps for tomorrow, there were two minor sentence
updates below (highlighted in yellow) based on information I received from Erik, namely:
The IT team applied some technical workarounds overnight to resume operation. We're still processing a
backlog of comments we have received.
Q. Why does ECFS show that no comments have been filed today? That can’t be true.
A. Our system is processing the large volume of comments submitted via ECFS, and we're catching up
on the backlog.
... neither dramatically change the message, just wanted to share what I had heard from Erik this
weekend. Many thanks.
-d.
What a day!
All in one place for the weekend.
Potential Saturday morning tweet:
As of midnight, 2.4 million OI comments. One million since 9/10. Our system is still catching up and
we’re still counting. (Link to DB’s blog?)
***
What Kim, GS, DB, FCC tweeted yesterday:
"Due to high number of comments received in last 24 hours, we do not yet have an official comment
count. Will provide ASAP."
What we said in the blog post:
http://www.fcc.gov/blog/additional-option-filing-open-internet-comments
The Commission is working to ensure that all comments are processed and that we have a full
accounting of the number received as soon as possible. Most important, all of these comments will
be considered as part of the rulemaking process. While our system is catching up with the surge of
public comments, we are providing a third avenue for submitting feedback on the Open Internet
proceeding.
OI Comments Q&A—9/9/14
Q. Why are you withholding the number of comments you’ve received?
A. We received a surge of comments over the past three days. Our IT team is working to ensure that
all comments are filed as part of the public record, but our system is still processing the high
volume. We will share a total count that accurately reflects the number of comments we have
received as soon as possible.
Q. Fight for the Future says they’ve been coordinating with the FCC’s tech team. Is that true?
A. We are working with public interest groups to make sure that all of the comments they’ve
collected are submitted for the record. (See blog post.)
Q. Did ECFS crash?
A. Wednesday night and early this morning, we received a surge of comments that caused ECFS, our
electronic comment system, to slow down. The IT team applied some technical workarounds
overnight to resume operation. We're still processing a backlog of comments we have received.
Q. Why does ECFS show that no comments have been filed today? That can’t be true.
A. Our system is processing the large volume of comments submitted via ECFS, and we're catching
up on the backlog. For now we have turned-off conversion of comments received into PDFs and
entered into ECFS so we can use all resources to receive comments. We will provide an accurate
total number of comments received as soon as we are able.
Q. If comments aren’t showing up in the system, does that mean they have been lost?
A. No, no comments have been lost. Our system is processing the high volume of comments
received, so it may take some time for the comments to show up in our system. They will all be part
of the record. For now we have turned-off conversion of comments received into PDFs and entered
into ECFS so we can use all resources to receive comments.
Q. When will you have a tally of comments received?
A. Our system is catching up on processing the volume of comments. In addition, we have provided
a third avenue for submitting comments. Our team is working to ensure all comments are filed and
counted properly. We will provide an update as soon as we can.
Q. If people submitted comments and now use the CSV option as well, how will we make sure
comments aren’t double counted?
A. We will report the raw number of all comments received. Some may be duplicates which the
Commission, as it analyzes all the comments received, will work to identify and take into account.
***
The volume of public feedback in the Open Internet proceeding has been commensurate with the
importance of the effort to preserve a free and open Internet.
The Commission is working to ensure that all comments are processed and that we have a full
accounting of the number received as soon as possible. Most important, all of these comments will
be considered as part of the rulemaking process. While our system is catching up with the surge of
public comments, we are providing a third avenue for submitting feedback on the Open Internet
proceeding.
In the Commission’s embrace of Open Data and a commitment to openness and transparency
throughout the Open Internet proceedings, the FCC is making available a Comma Separated Values
(CSV) file for bulk upload of comments given the exceptional public interest. All comments will be
received and recorded through the same process we are applying for the [email protected]
emails.
Attached is a link to the CSV file template along with instructions. Once completed, the CSV file can
be emailed to [email protected] where if it matches the template the individual comments will
be filed for the public record with the Electronic Comment Filing System. When you email this file,
please use the subject “CSV”. We encourage CSV files of 9MB or less via email.
The Commission welcomes the record-setting level of public input in this proceeding, and we want
to do everything we can to make sure all voices are heard and reflected in the public record
From: Kimberly Wild
To: Kris Monteith; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane
Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Date: Saturday, September 13, 2014 11:31:35 AM
OI numbers included.
From: Kris Monteith
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:53 AM
To: David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach;
Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: Re: OI Numbers Update
Adding Sharon Bowers and Teresa Flasher, who are working mailbox numbers.
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: David Bray
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:48 AM
To: Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach;
Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
10-4. Added columns to a spreadsheet for the CSV files -- attached here if it helps to insert the numbers.
Confirmed that the ECFS, OI email, and CSV totals do add up to the final total.
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV Total CSV
Cumulative
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments comments
totals
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Friday 12-Sep 1600 111,976 902,488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
Friday 12-Sep End of Day 147,163 937,675 62,486 1,204,123 287,177 505,790 2,647,588
We are working on the mailbox numbers. Ran into a glitch -- sending someone into the office in G-burg. She's on her way -- should have them in about
an hour. My apologies. Kris
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: David Bray
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:18 AM
To: Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Many thanks Erik -- cut-and-pasted your numbers into the table. Defer to CGB for the OI E-mail box numbers.
(noon) 82,348 872,860 39,842 1,181,479 2,054,339
(2:00) 102,006 892,518 46,371 1,188,008 2,080,526
(4:00) 111,976 902, 488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
(midnight) 147,163 937,675 -pending- -pending- 287,177 505,790
2,636,156 not including OI emails yet
Sat, Sept 13 (10:00) 28,376 965,530 -pending- -pending- 0 505,790
2,664,011 not including OI emails yet
As of 10 AM 9/13/14:
14-28 Daily Total: 28,376
14-28 Acc. Total: 965,530
This is ECFS only, does not include the CSV files.
Thank you,
Erik
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Information Technology Center
Office: TW-A626F
Phone: (202) 418-1248
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:05 AM
To: Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
As of midnight:
14-28 Daily Total: 147,163 (third highest daily total)
14-28 Acc. Total: 937,675
This is ECFS only, does not include the CSV files.
Thank you,
Erik
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Information Technology Center
Office: TW-A626F
Phone: (202) 418-1248
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 6:12 PM
To: David Bray; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
All,
Can we get an update tomorrow morning by 10am of the total in the system at midnight.
It sounds like we may hit a million since Wednesday, and we want to reserve the right to get that out in some fashion tomorrow morning.
Thanks,
Shannon
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:16 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
I’d recommend adding the CSV numbers too – see below:
2,313,792 = total
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:08 PM
To: Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: OI Numbers Update
4:00 pm numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Daily CSV Total CSV Cumulative totals
comments Comments Box Emails Box comments comments
received received Received received received
E-mails received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
(noon) 82,348 872,860 39,842 1,181,479 2,054,339
(2:00) 102,006 892,518 46,371 1,188,008 2,080,526
(4:00) 111,976 902, 488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 12:09 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Noon numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
(2:00) 123,525 669,668 91,123 1,139,221 1,808,889
(4:00) 139,063 685,206 93,539 1,141,637 1,826,843
Fri, Sept 12 (9:30) 70,523 861,035 34,344 1,175,981 2,037,016
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 12:55 PM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
I’ve filled in the chart below with the 9:30 and noon numbers for today.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 9:45 AM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
As of 9:30 today:
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI Email Total OI Email Cumulative Total
85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 8:14 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Per David, we’ve received 70,175 comments in ECFS so far today. I will schedule a call for 10 a.m. so the team can get an update on what we are seeing and the plan
for today.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:27 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Good morning. Can we get yesterday's total?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:40 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:34 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Can we get the latest numbers?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Similarly, believe Erik could get an ECFS count of what happened at "End of Day" for Monday, 15 Sept by Tuesday, 16 Sept at 0800. IT can do the same for CSV files
received.
Also if possible, one item to stress is that the 2nd round has closed -- and while technically people can continue to file after this period, it would be best to encourage
some sense of closure of the 120-some-days if at all possible?
Kris and Kimberly - on Monday or Tuesday, would it be possible for CGB to share an updated count of Open Internet emails received by week, similar to this chart?
http://www.fcc gov/sites/default/files/images/count-email-weekly-comments-slide1.png ... it was last updated on 09 July? We can do the same for ECFS comments.
-d.
We haven't experienced any delays with respect to the OI mailbox. Just tell us when you want us to report. Thanks. Kris
Realistically, when do you think we will have an accurate count after the comment period closes? We will need to manage expectations tomorrow
morning.
No new CSV files received as of 1000. Erik will be able to provide the ECFS numbers when he's available.
One question re: the OI email numbers. The last count was 1,298,602 on Saturday at 1000. If we received 224,630 since then that would add up to 1,523,232? Is the OI
email 1,575,341 total received b/c the 224,630 isn't since the last count on Saturday at 1000, but rather since "End of Day" Saturday?
If so, this would mean we received an additional 52,109 between 1000 Saturday and "End of Day" Saturday.
Either way, not including ECFS yet, we're now over 2,994,552+ comments received.
Interesting and impressive that we received 224,630 emails since Saturday. I think part of those are the international emails we had been told were inbound from one
group.
Confirmed that the ECFS, OI email, and CSV totals do add up to the final total.
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV Total CSV
Cumulative
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments comments
totals
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Tuesday 9-Sep Evening 7520 492,443 40,126 911,252 1,403,695
Friday 12-Sep 1600 111,976 902,488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
Friday 12-Sep End of Day 147,163 937,675 62,486 1,204,123 287,177 505,790 2,647,588
We are working on the mailbox numbers. Ran into a glitch -- sending someone into the office in G-burg. She's on her way -- should have them in about
an hour. My apologies. Kris
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: David Bray
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:18 AM
To: Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Many thanks Erik -- cut-and-pasted your numbers into the table. Defer to CGB for the OI E-mail box numbers.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 06:50 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update ... we’ve passed 1 million comments received in the last 48 hours ...
As of 10 AM 9/13/14:
14-28 Daily Total: 28,376
14-28 Acc. Total: 965,530
This is ECFS only, does not include the CSV files.
Thank you,
Erik
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Information Technology Center
Office: TW-A626F
Phone: (202) 418-1248
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:05 AM
To: Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
As of midnight:
14-28 Daily Total: 147,163 (third highest daily total)
14-28 Acc. Total: 937,675
This is ECFS only, does not include the CSV files.
Thank you,
Erik
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Information Technology Center
Office: TW-A626F
Phone: (202) 418-1248
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 6:12 PM
To: David Bray; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
All,
Can we get an update tomorrow morning by 10am of the total in the system at midnight.
It sounds like we may hit a million since Wednesday, and we want to reserve the right to get that out in some fashion tomorrow morning.
Thanks,
Shannon
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:16 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
I’d recommend adding the CSV numbers too – see below:
2,313,792 = total
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:08 PM
To: Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: OI Numbers Update
4:00 pm numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Daily CSV Total CSV Cumulative totals
comments Comments Box Emails Box comments comments
received received Received received received
E-mails received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
(2:00) 123,525 669,668 91,123 1,139,221 1,808,889
(4:00) 139,063 685,206 93,539 1,141,637 1,826,843
Fri, Sept 12 (9:30) 70,523 861,035 34,344 1,175,981 2,037,016
(noon) 82,348 872,860 39,842 1,181,479 2,054,339
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 1:00 PM
To: Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Here’s the chart Kim provided, moved up to the top of the email chain for your quick reference. Thanks.
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 12:55 PM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
I’ve filled in the chart below with the 9:30 and noon numbers for today.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 9:45 AM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
As of 9:30 today:
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI Email Total OI Email Cumulative Total
85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 8:14 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Per David, we’ve received 70,175 comments in ECFS so far today. I will schedule a call for 10 a.m. so the team can get an update on what we are seeing and the plan
for today.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:27 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Good morning. Can we get yesterday's total?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:40 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:34 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Can we get the latest numbers?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
All in one place:
As of noon
Total comments received 9/10: 73,606
Cumulative total: 1,477, 301
Of the 73,606:
ECFS: 29,177/521,620 (so far)
Mailbox: 44,429/955,681.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:36 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
OI Mailbox – 44,429 new comments as of noon, for a cumulative total of 955,681. Thanks.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:20 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Sorry, that’s 29,177 since yesterday. (I have a calculator with a bad display.)
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:18 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
The ECFS numbers as of 12 noon are at 521,620. That’s 23,111 ne comments in ECFS since yesterday’s numbers. I’m in the process of getting
the OI mailbox numbers. Thanks.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 12:58 PM
To: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Needed: Numbers Update
IT/CGB,
Can we get a numbers update as of 12:00/12:30? Are we experiencing any issues with ECFS or the mail box so far?
As a reminder, we will need another data pull at 5:00/5:30.
Thanks,
Shannon
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received E-mails
received
10:00 am numbers.
From: David Bray
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:48 AM
To: Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach;
Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
10-4. Added columns to a spreadsheet for the CSV files -- attached here if it helps to insert the numbers.
Confirmed that the ECFS, OI email, and CSV totals do add up to the final total.
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV Total CSV
Cumulative
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments comments
totals
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Friday 12-Sep 1600 111,976 902,488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
Friday 12-Sep End of Day 147,163 937,675 62,486 1,204,123 287,177 505,790 2,647,588
Sunday 14-Sep End of Day 84,316 1,151,239 268,539 1,619,250 0 505,790 3,276,279
We are working on the mailbox numbers. Ran into a glitch -- sending someone into the office in G-burg. She's on her way -- should have them in about
an hour. My apologies. Kris
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: David Bray
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:18 AM
To: Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Many thanks Erik -- cut-and-pasted your numbers into the table. Defer to CGB for the OI E-mail box numbers.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 06:50 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update ... we’ve passed 1 million comments received in the last 48 hours ...
(noon) 82,348 872,860 39,842 1,181,479 2,054,339
(2:00) 102,006 892,518 46,371 1,188,008 2,080,526
(4:00) 111,976 902, 488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
(midnight) 147,163 937,675 -pending- -pending- 287,177 505,790
2,636,156 not including OI emails yet
Sat, Sept 13 (10:00) 28,376 965,530 -pending- -pending- 0 505,790
2,664,011 not including OI emails yet
As of 10 AM 9/13/14:
14-28 Daily Total: 28,376
14-28 Acc. Total: 965,530
This is ECFS only, does not include the CSV files.
Thank you,
Erik
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Information Technology Center
Office: TW-A626F
Phone: (202) 418-1248
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:05 AM
To: Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
As of midnight:
14-28 Daily Total: 147,163 (third highest daily total)
14-28 Acc. Total: 937,675
This is ECFS only, does not include the CSV files.
Thank you,
Erik
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Information Technology Center
Office: TW-A626F
Phone: (202) 418-1248
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 6:12 PM
To: David Bray; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
All,
Can we get an update tomorrow morning by 10am of the total in the system at midnight.
It sounds like we may hit a million since Wednesday, and we want to reserve the right to get that out in some fashion tomorrow morning.
Thanks,
Shannon
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:16 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
I’d recommend adding the CSV numbers too – see below:
2,313,792 = total
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:08 PM
To: Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: OI Numbers Update
4:00 pm numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Daily CSV Total CSV Cumulative totals
comments Comments Box Emails Box comments comments
received received Received received received
E-mails received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
(noon) 82,348 872,860 39,842 1,181,479 2,054,339
(2:00) 102,006 892,518 46,371 1,188,008 2,080,526
(4:00) 111,976 902, 488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 12:09 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Noon numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
(2:00) 123,525 669,668 91,123 1,139,221 1,808,889
(4:00) 139,063 685,206 93,539 1,141,637 1,826,843
Fri, Sept 12 (9:30) 70,523 861,035 34,344 1,175,981 2,037,016
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 12:55 PM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
I’ve filled in the chart below with the 9:30 and noon numbers for today.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 9:45 AM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
As of 9:30 today:
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI Email Total OI Email Cumulative Total
85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 8:14 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Per David, we’ve received 70,175 comments in ECFS so far today. I will schedule a call for 10 a.m. so the team can get an update on what we are seeing and the plan
for today.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:27 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Good morning. Can we get yesterday's total?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:40 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:34 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Can we get the latest numbers?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Noon numbers.
From: David Bray
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:48 AM
To: Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach;
Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
10-4. Added columns to a spreadsheet for the CSV files -- attached here if it helps to insert the numbers.
Confirmed that the ECFS, OI email, and CSV totals do add up to the final total.
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV Total CSV
Cumulative
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments comments
totals
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Friday 12-Sep 1600 111,976 902,488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
Friday 12-Sep End of Day 147,163 937,675 62,486 1,204,123 287,177 505,790 2,647,588
Sunday 14-Sep End of Day 84,316 1,151,239 268,539 1,619,250 0 505,790 3,276,279
We are working on the mailbox numbers. Ran into a glitch -- sending someone into the office in G-burg. She's on her way -- should have them in about
an hour. My apologies. Kris
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: David Bray
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:18 AM
To: Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Many thanks Erik -- cut-and-pasted your numbers into the table. Defer to CGB for the OI E-mail box numbers.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 06:50 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update ... we’ve passed 1 million comments received in the last 48 hours ...
(noon) 82,348 872,860 39,842 1,181,479 2,054,339
(2:00) 102,006 892,518 46,371 1,188,008 2,080,526
(4:00) 111,976 902, 488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
(midnight) 147,163 937,675 -pending- -pending- 287,177 505,790
2,636,156 not including OI emails yet
Sat, Sept 13 (10:00) 28,376 965,530 -pending- -pending- 0 505,790
2,664,011 not including OI emails yet
As of 10 AM 9/13/14:
14-28 Daily Total: 28,376
14-28 Acc. Total: 965,530
This is ECFS only, does not include the CSV files.
Thank you,
Erik
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Information Technology Center
Office: TW-A626F
Phone: (202) 418-1248
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:05 AM
To: Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
As of midnight:
14-28 Daily Total: 147,163 (third highest daily total)
14-28 Acc. Total: 937,675
This is ECFS only, does not include the CSV files.
Thank you,
Erik
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Information Technology Center
Office: TW-A626F
Phone: (202) 418-1248
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 6:12 PM
To: David Bray; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
All,
Can we get an update tomorrow morning by 10am of the total in the system at midnight.
It sounds like we may hit a million since Wednesday, and we want to reserve the right to get that out in some fashion tomorrow morning.
Thanks,
Shannon
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:16 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
I’d recommend adding the CSV numbers too – see below:
2,313,792 = total
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:08 PM
To: Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: OI Numbers Update
4:00 pm numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Daily CSV Total CSV Cumulative totals
comments Comments Box Emails Box comments comments
received received Received received received
E-mails received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
(noon) 82,348 872,860 39,842 1,181,479 2,054,339
(2:00) 102,006 892,518 46,371 1,188,008 2,080,526
(4:00) 111,976 902, 488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 12:09 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Noon numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
(2:00) 123,525 669,668 91,123 1,139,221 1,808,889
(4:00) 139,063 685,206 93,539 1,141,637 1,826,843
Fri, Sept 12 (9:30) 70,523 861,035 34,344 1,175,981 2,037,016
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 12:55 PM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
I’ve filled in the chart below with the 9:30 and noon numbers for today.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 9:45 AM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
As of 9:30 today:
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI Email Total OI Email Cumulative Total
85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 8:14 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Per David, we’ve received 70,175 comments in ECFS so far today. I will schedule a call for 10 a.m. so the team can get an update on what we are seeing and the plan
for today.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:27 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Good morning. Can we get yesterday's total?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:40 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:34 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Can we get the latest numbers?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
2:00 numbers.
From: David Bray
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:48 AM
To: Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach;
Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
10-4. Added columns to a spreadsheet for the CSV files -- attached here if it helps to insert the numbers.
Confirmed that the ECFS, OI email, and CSV totals do add up to the final total.
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV Total CSV
Cumulative
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments comments
totals
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Friday 12-Sep 1600 111,976 902,488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
Friday 12-Sep End of Day 147,163 937,675 62,486 1,204,123 287,177 505,790 2,647,588
Sunday 14-Sep End of Day 84,316 1,151,239 268,539 1,619,250 0 505,790 3,276,279
Monday 15-Sep 1400 107,971 1,259,210 142,874 1,762,124 26,499 532,289 3,553,623
We are working on the mailbox numbers. Ran into a glitch -- sending someone into the office in G-burg. She's on her way -- should have them in about
an hour. My apologies. Kris
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: David Bray
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:18 AM
To: Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Many thanks Erik -- cut-and-pasted your numbers into the table. Defer to CGB for the OI E-mail box numbers.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 06:50 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update ... we’ve passed 1 million comments received in the last 48 hours ...
(noon) 82,348 872,860 39,842 1,181,479 2,054,339
(2:00) 102,006 892,518 46,371 1,188,008 2,080,526
(4:00) 111,976 902, 488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
(midnight) 147,163 937,675 -pending- -pending- 287,177 505,790
2,636,156 not including OI emails yet
Sat, Sept 13 (10:00) 28,376 965,530 -pending- -pending- 0 505,790
2,664,011 not including OI emails yet
As of 10 AM 9/13/14:
14-28 Daily Total: 28,376
14-28 Acc. Total: 965,530
This is ECFS only, does not include the CSV files.
Thank you,
Erik
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Information Technology Center
Office: TW-A626F
Phone: (202) 418-1248
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2014 10:05 AM
To: Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
As of midnight:
14-28 Daily Total: 147,163 (third highest daily total)
14-28 Acc. Total: 937,675
This is ECFS only, does not include the CSV files.
Thank you,
Erik
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Information Technology Center
Office: TW-A626F
Phone: (202) 418-1248
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 6:12 PM
To: David Bray; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
All,
Can we get an update tomorrow morning by 10am of the total in the system at midnight.
It sounds like we may hit a million since Wednesday, and we want to reserve the right to get that out in some fashion tomorrow morning.
Thanks,
Shannon
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:16 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
I’d recommend adding the CSV numbers too – see below:
2,313,792 = total
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:08 PM
To: Kimberly Wild; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: OI Numbers Update
4:00 pm numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Daily CSV Total CSV Cumulative totals
comments Comments Box Emails Box comments comments
received received Received received received
E-mails received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
(noon) 82,348 872,860 39,842 1,181,479 2,054,339
(2:00) 102,006 892,518 46,371 1,188,008 2,080,526
(4:00) 111,976 902, 488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 12:09 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Noon numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
(2:00) 123,525 669,668 91,123 1,139,221 1,808,889
(4:00) 139,063 685,206 93,539 1,141,637 1,826,843
Fri, Sept 12 (9:30) 70,523 861,035 34,344 1,175,981 2,037,016
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 12:55 PM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
I’ve filled in the chart below with the 9:30 and noon numbers for today.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 9:45 AM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
As of 9:30 today:
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI Email Total OI Email Cumulative Total
85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 8:14 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Per David, we’ve received 70,175 comments in ECFS so far today. I will schedule a call for 10 a.m. so the team can get an update on what we are seeing and the plan
for today.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:27 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Good morning. Can we get yesterday's total?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:40 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:34 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Can we get the latest numbers?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Thanks, David. Appreciate all the help. We are working on #2 and will. Get you the answer to #3. And we also suggest that the count end as of
end of day 9/15, the official end of the comment/reply comment period. Kris
The same data in spreadsheet form -- Erik's team will add ECFS and CSV tomorrow (we received a CSV at about 2330 tonight).
1. We will to subtract from the total are the "Various/Numerous" posts that were OI emails uploaded into ECFS for 14-28 so we don't double-count.
2. We will need the weekly OI email amounts received from July-onwards. IT will do the daily ECFS counts.
3. Also question for CGB: were postal mail letters received uploaded to ECFS one at a time, or in bulk? If in bulk, do we know how many total were received so we
don't under-count?
Lastly, it is my understanding from Matt that while 14-28 won't technically close on ECFS, it will now shift to not being comments but ex parte filings, so we should
probably conclude our number count as of "End of Day" Monday?
-d.
Midnight OI count
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV Total CSV
Cumulative
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments comments
totals
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Friday 12-Sep 1600 111,976 902,488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
Friday 12-Sep End of Day 147,163 937,675 62,486 1,204,123 287,177 505,790 2,647,588
Sunday 14-Sep 1000 8,037 1,066,923 224,630 1,575,341 0 505,790 3,148,054
Sunday 14-Sep End of Day 84,316 1,151,239 268,539 1,619,250 0 505,790 3,276,279
Monday 15-Sep 1000 65,458 1,216,697 108,549 1,727,799 0 505,790 3,450,286
Monday 15-Sep 1200 87,976 1,239,215 124,430 1,743,680 0 505,790 3,488,685
Monday 15-Sep 1400 107,971 1,259,210 142,874 1,762,124 26,499 532,289 3,553,623
Monday 15-Sep 1600 122,364 1,273,603 158,655 1,777,905 0 532,289 3,583,797
Thank you,
Erik
---
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
445 Twelfth Street SW.
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-1248
>The same data in spreadsheet form -- Erik's team will add ECFS and CSV
>tomorrow (we received a CSV at about 2330 tonight).
>
>
>1. We will to subtract from the total are the "Various/Numerous" posts
>that were OI emails uploaded into ECFS for 14-28 so we don't double-count.
>
>
>2. We will need the weekly OI email amounts received from July-onwards.
>IT will do the daily ECFS counts.
>
>
>3. Also question for CGB: were postal mail letters received uploaded to
>ECFS one at a time, or in bulk? If in bulk, do we know how many total
>were received so we don't under-count?
>
>
>Lastly, it is my understanding from Matt that while 14-28 won't
>technically close on ECFS, it will now shift to not being comments but ex
>parte filings, so we should probably conclude our number count as of "End
>of Day" Monday?
>
>
>Many thanks all for everyone's hard work and energy,
>
>-d.
>
>________________________________________
>From: Kimberly Wild
>Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 12:14 AM
>To: Michael Carowitz; David Bray; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon
>Gilson
>Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield;
>Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie
>Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon
>Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers;
> Teresa Flasher
>Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
>
>
>Midnight OI count
>
>Day
>Date
>Time
>Daily ECFS comments received
>Total ECFS comments received
>Daily OI email comments received
>Total OI email comments received
>Daily CSV comments received
>Total CSV comments received
>Cumulative totals
>Monday
>8-Sep
>Evening
>422
>484,923
>10,405
>871,126
>
>
>1,356,049
>Tuesday
>9-Sep
>Evening
>7520
>492,443
>40,126
>911,252
>
>
>1,403,695
>Wednesday
>10-Sep
>Evening
>41,173
>533,616
>70,286
>981,538
>
>
>1,515,154
>Thursday
>11-Sep
>930
>85,932
>632,328
>70,009
>1,118,107
>
>
>1,750,435
>Thursday
>11-Sep
>1200
>109,818
>656,214
>80,555
>1,128,653
>
>
>1,784,867
>Thursday
>11-Sep
>1400
>123,525
>669,921
>91,123
>1,139,221
>
>
>1,809,142
>Thursday
>11-Sep
>1600
>139,063
>685,459
>93,539
>1,141,637
>
>
>1,827,096
>Friday
>12-Sep
>930
>70,523
>861,035
>34,344
>1,175,981
>
>
>2,037,016
>Friday
>12-Sep
>1200
>82,348
>872,860
>39,842
>1,181,479
>
>
>2,054,339
>Friday
>12-Sep
>1400
>102,006
>892,518
>47,371
>1,189,008
>
>
>2,081,526
>Friday
>12-Sep
>1600
>111,976
>902,488
>51,054
>1,192,691
>218,613
>218,613
>2,313,792
>Friday
>12-Sep
>End of Day
>147,163
>937,675
>62,486
>1,204,123
>287,177
>505,790
>2,647,588
>Saturday
>13-Sep
>1000
>28,376
>965,530
>94,479
>1,298,602
>0
>505,790
>2,769,922
>Saturday 13-Sep End of Day 92,835 1,058,886
> 146,588 1,350,711 0
> 505,790 2,915,387
>Sunday 14-Sep 1000 8,037
>1,066,923 224,630 1,575,341
> 0 505,790 3,148,054
>Sunday 14-Sep End of Day 84,316 1,151,239
> 268,539 1,619,250 0
> 505,790 3,276,279
>Monday 15-Sep 1000 65,458
>1,216,697 108,549 1,727,799
> 0 505,790 3,450,286
>Monday 15-Sep 1200 87,976
>1,239,215 124,430 1,743,680
> 0 505,790 3,488,685
>Monday 15-Sep 1400 107,971 1,259,210
> 142,874 1,762,124 26,499
> 532,289 3,553,623
>Monday 15-Sep 1600 122,364
>1,273,603
> 158,655 1,777,905 0 532,289
> 3,583,797
>Monday 15-Sep midnight
> 223,781 1,843,031
>
>
>
>
From: Michael Carowitz
To: David Bray; Kimberly Wild; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero;
Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher; Melissa Askew (melissa [email protected])
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Date: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 9:48:37 AM
Regarding #3 below, some of the entries for postal mail letters were placed into ECFS in bulk. We’re reviewing the entries right now to get the overall
numbers. Compared to emails and online ECFS filings, postal submissions are quite finite. More details to follow, as soon as we’ve completed our expedited
review. Thanks.
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 12:59 AM
To: Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie
Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
The same data in spreadsheet form -- Erik's team will add ECFS and CSV tomorrow (we received a CSV at about 2330 tonight).
1. We will to subtract from the total are the "Various/Numerous" posts that were OI emails uploaded into ECFS for 14-28 so we don't double-count.
2. We will need the weekly OI email amounts received from July-onwards. IT will do the daily ECFS counts.
3. Also question for CGB: were postal mail letters received uploaded to ECFS one at a time, or in bulk? If in bulk, do we know how many total were received so we
don't under-count?
Lastly, it is my understanding from Matt that while 14-28 won't technically close on ECFS, it will now shift to not being comments but ex parte filings, so we should
probably conclude our number count as of "End of Day" Monday?
-d.
Midnight OI count
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV Total CSV
Cumulative
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments comments
totals
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Friday 12-Sep 1600 111,976 902,488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
Friday 12-Sep End of Day 147,163 937,675 62,486 1,204,123 287,177 505,790 2,647,588
Sunday 14-Sep 1000 8,037 1,066,923 224,630 1,575,341 0 505,790 3,148,054
Sunday 14-Sep End of Day 84,316 1,151,239 268,539 1,619,250 0 505,790 3,276,279
Monday 15-Sep 1000 65,458 1,216,697 108,549 1,727,799 0 505,790 3,450,286
Monday 15-Sep 1200 87,976 1,239,215 124,430 1,743,680 0 505,790 3,488,685
Monday 15-Sep 1400 107,971 1,259,210 142,874 1,762,124 26,499 532,289 3,553,623
Monday 15-Sep 1600 122,364 1,273,603 158,655 1,777,905 0 532,289 3,583,797
Minor update to the spreadsheet to have a running count for the CSV files No change in total at the moment
Also attached is a count of ECFS comments received by day including this chart:
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 12:28 PM
To: Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero;
Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Spreadsheet with the numbers Kimberly and Erik all sent Standing by for the number of “Various/Numerous” OI emails in ECFS and the number of postal mails
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 12:14 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; David Bray; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero;
Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Midnight OI count
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV Total CSV
Cumulative
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments comments
totals
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Friday 12-Sep 1600 111,976 902,488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
Friday 12-Sep End of Day 147,163 937,675 62,486 1,204,123 287,177 505,790 2,647,588
Sunday 14-Sep 1000 8,037 1,066,923 224,630 1,575,341 0 505,790 3,148,054
Sunday 14-Sep End of Day 84,316 1,151,239 268,539 1,619,250 0 505,790 3,276,279
Monday 15-Sep 1000 65,458 1,216,697 108,549 1,727,799 0 505,790 3,450,286
Monday 15-Sep 1200 87,976 1,239,215 124,430 1,743,680 0 505,790 3,488,685
Monday 15-Sep 1400 107,971 1,259,210 142,874 1,762,124 26,499 532,289 3,553,623
Monday 15-Sep 1600 122,364 1,273,603 158,655 1,777,905 0 532,289 3,583,797
I’d prefer to give the exact #, but I don’t feel intensely about this.
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 5:04 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie
Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
As a round number, IT is okay. Do we want to say “approximately” or “about”.
Yes, the spreadsheet includes OI emails, ECFS, and CSV.
Hope this helps.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 5:02 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; David Bray; Kimberly Wild; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie
Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
IT, you good? We need to get these out.
As of midnight last night, the FCC received 3.7 million Open Internet comments.
To be sure, this is ECFS, mailbox and CSV?
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 4:50 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; David Bray; Kimberly Wild; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie
Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Yes for CGB. I assume you’ll be rounding it off to 3.7 million.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 4:40 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; David Bray; Kimberly Wild; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie
Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
To be sure, 3,701,130 is the final agreed upon number? And OMR has the green light to release?
As of midnight last night, the FCC received 3,701,130 Open Internet comments.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 4:34 PM
To: David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Kimberly Wild; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie
Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Yes, that likely makes the most sense. Thanks.
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 4:26 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson; Kimberly Wild; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie
Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Many thanks Michael. How does this change the spreadsheet? Should the end of day total for 11 September for OI emails be decreased by 66,560?
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 4:25 PM
To: David Bray; Shannon Gilson; Kimberly Wild; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie
Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
CGB has been going through the numbers carefully today in advance of going public. We’ve found one discrepancy where 66,560 comments were counted
twice in intra-day reports on September 11 th . The good news is that we caught this in advance of going public and that all of the other math is solid. Given
that, the final number is 3,767,690 (from below) minus 66,560 = 3,701,130. Thanks.
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 2:54 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson; Kimberly Wild; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie
Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins; Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
3,767,690 is the current
Monday 15-Sep End of Day 164,962 1,321,086 223,781 1,843,031 31,056 536,846 3,700,963
postal or
139 numerous/various before 18 July 66,899 - 172
faxes
33 numerous/various after 18 July + 66,899
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV Total CSV
Cumulative
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments comments
totals
received received received received received received
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Friday 12-Sep 1600 111,976 902,488 51,054 1,192,691 218,613 218,613 2,313,792
Friday 12-Sep End of Day 147,163 937,675 62,486 1,204,123 287,177 505,790 2,647,588
Sunday 14-Sep 1000 8,037 1,066,923 224,630 1,575,341 0 505,790 3,148,054
Sunday 14-Sep End of Day 84,316 1,151,239 268,539 1,619,250 0 505,790 3,276,279
Monday 15-Sep 1000 65,458 1,216,697 108,549 1,727,799 0 505,790 3,450,286
Monday 15-Sep 1200 87,976 1,239,215 124,430 1,743,680 0 505,790 3,488,685
Monday 15-Sep 1400 107,971 1,259,210 142,874 1,762,124 26,499 532,289 3,553,623
Monday 15-Sep 1600 122,364 1,273,603 158,655 1,777,905 0 532,289 3,583,797
Monday 15-Sep midnight 164,962 1,321,086 223,781 1,843,031 4,557 536,846 3,700,963
From: David Bray
To: Shannon Gilson; Tony Summerlin; Jon Wilkins; Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Sara Morris;
Julie Veach; Jonathan Sallet; Diane Cornell
Cc: Kim Hart; Mark Wigfield; Neil Grace; Bartees Cox
Subject: RE: OI prep background (Sending to reporters at 12:10)
Date: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 1:22:48 PM
The FCC expects an increased volume of traffic on Wednesday. The public can file comments for the
public record through [email protected] or through the Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS).
ECFS is an 18-year old system that FCC IT team has done their best to scale, short of a complete
rewrite, for the anticipated volume of traffic. If a surge of comments are filed all at once in ECFS, the
system may slow down for everyone. We recommend people consider emailing their comments to
[email protected].
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 11:53 AM
To: David Bray; Tony Summerlin; Jon Wilkins; Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn; Sara
Morris; Julie Veach; Jonathan Sallet; Diane Cornell
Cc: Kim Hart; Mark Wigfield; Neil Grace; Bartees Cox
Subject: OI prep background (Sending to reporters at 12:10)
All,
I boiled down the draft statement for a few outlets on deadline that are asking about what we are
doing to prep. Please let me know if you have any concerns by 12:10.
Thanks.
The FCC expects an increased volume of traffic on Wednesday. The public can file comments for the
public record through [email protected] or through the Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS).
ECFS is an 18-year old system that FCC IT team has done their best to scale, short of a complete
rewrite, for the anticipated volume of traffic. If a surge of a comments are filed all at once in ECFS, the
system may slow down for everyone. We recommend people consider emailing their comments to
[email protected].
Relevant links
www.fcc.gov/blog/need-modernize-fcc-s-it-systems
http://www.fcc.gov/document/chairman-tom-wheeler-testimony-fccs-fiscal-2015-budget-request
www.fcc.gov/blog/keeping-track-open-internet-comments-submitted
From: David Bray
To: Michael Carowitz; Sagar Doshi; ITleadership; Erik Scheibert
Cc: Gigi Sohn; Kris Monteith; Kimberly Wild; D"wana Terry; Matthew DelNero; Sharon Bowers; Tony Summerlin
Subject: RE: Post-Midnight Processing
Date: Monday, September 15, 2014 4:58:14 PM
10-4. Tomorrow if CGB follows up w/ Erik he & his team can help write a rule to auto-reply to all
messages with this.
The one caveat is if the same email address sent us multiple messages in – they’ll get multiple
replies. So we may want to edit the language to reflect that in the note (or not), defer to Sagar, CGB,
and OMR?
Coordinating between CGB and Erik will be key – as this doing this will appear like FCC just sent 1+
million emails out in a very short time – and we don’t want it to appear to CenturyLink (our ISP) like
we suddenly decided to spam the internet… Also, lots of “out of office” emails may come back at us.
We may want to also write a rule for such messages to be auto-filed in a subfolder?
Hope this helps,
-d.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 4:54 PM
To: Sagar Doshi; David Bray; ITleadership
Cc: Gigi Sohn; Kris Monteith; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry; Matthew DelNero; Sharon Bowers
Subject: RE: Post-Midnight Processing
Yes, all of the emails since July 18 th currently reside in the OI e-mailbox, which is an Outlook
program.
From: Sagar Doshi
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 4:53 PM
To: David Bray; Michael Carowitz; ITleadership
Cc: Gigi Sohn; Kris Monteith; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry; Matthew DelNero; Sharon Bowers
Subject: RE: Post-Midnight Processing
Yeah, that sounds exactly right. That should work, as long as you (CGB) still have all the emails in
Outlook. Assuming you do, then yeah, Erik Scheibert should be able to help confirm this tomorrow,
and then we should be able to send these emails a lot more quickly than 800/1K.
Michael, could you confirm for us that the emails are in Outlook? If so, then we should be in good
shape.
Sagar
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 4:48 PM
To: Sagar Doshi; Michael Carowitz; ITleadership
Cc: Gigi Sohn; Kris Monteith; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry; Matthew DelNero; Sharon Bowers
Subject: RE: Post-Midnight Processing
If all the emails are received in Exchange before going into Remedy, can’t we just simply do a rule
applied to all messages in the Exchange/MS Outlook box to automatically reply?
I think this needs to be elevated to a contractor – Charles is a contractor, Erik might be good to talk
to tomorrow on this.
From: Sagar Doshi
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 4:42 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership
Cc: Gigi Sohn; Kris Monteith; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry; Matthew DelNero; Sharon Bowers
Subject: RE: Post-Midnight Processing
Okay. Looks like we have no choice, but to do this first then.
But listen, I was doing some back of the envelope calculating, and with ~1 million reply comments to
the OI inbox at a max of 1,000/hour, we’re talking 42 days before everything is done, and that’s
with constant activity and 100% uptime!
There has to be a better way than that. Otherwise we can’t even begin the PDFing until a month
and a half from now, meaning that the analysis comes through way too late. If we have everyone’s
email, is there truly no way to mass email everyone who submitted a comment with the Chairman’s
thank you?
@David & co:, any ideas?
Sagar
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 4:35 PM
To: Sagar Doshi; ITleadership
Cc: Gigi Sohn; Kris Monteith; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry; Matthew DelNero; Sharon Bowers
Subject: RE: Post-Midnight Processing
CGB has had further discussions with Charles Crossan of ITC, who is responsible for administering
the Remedy database, through which the Chairman’s canned response is sent to the OI emails.
Charles is only able to have Remedy send out the responses if Remedy processes the emails before
they are PDFed and prepped for the record. You’ll recall from my message at the bottom that the
emailing process is quite a bit slower than the prepping for the record.
If Charles is correct, the timing of availability of the OI emails for ECFS (and ultimately an XML file)
will be dependent on how quickly Remedy can complete responses to the emails at a rate of just
800-1000 per hour. I don’t know whether this slower processing is acceptable or not (as opposed to
PDFing first and responding second, which Charles said is not feasible from a workflow perspective).
ITC may have other tools at its disposal to speed up this process or can otherwise satisfy Remedy’s
requirements in a way that minimizes the delay.
Please let us know how you’d like us to proceed. Thanks.
From: Sagar Doshi
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 1:49 PM
To: Michael Carowitz
Cc: Gigi Sohn; Kris Monteith; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry
Subject: RE: Post-Midnight Processing
Hi team,
Michael and I just talked on the phone. This is perfectly reasonable. Getting PDFs to Erik Scheibert
ASAP will at least help move that train on time, and if it takes Brian Ulmer longer to send the
responses, it’s probably better to do that after the PDFing.
Bottom line, I agree. Let’s just watch to make sure the responses don’t go out too late. If it’s many
weeks from now, and we’re still sending reply comments out, that may not look all that good.
Sagar
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 1:23 PM
To: Sagar Doshi
Cc: Gigi Sohn; Kris Monteith; Kimberly Wild; D'wana Terry
Subject: Post-Midnight Processing
Sagar –
I understand that CGB has been asked to begin responding to the emails after midnight tomorrow.
I’d like to clarify one thing regarding my message below from Friday.
Given that it will take CGB’s single IT person about an hour to PDF 50,000 to 100,000 emails,
wouldn’t it be better to first get the emails into PDF, the PDFs then sent to Erik’s team for redaction,
and then entered into the ECFS record by CGB)?
Responding to the emails through remedy occurs at a rate of 800-1000 messages per hour, so this is
quite a bit slower. Assuming that the emails can be duplicated, it’ll be more efficient to have CGB’s
IT person do the PDFing first and get things into the record. Some time later, we could do the
responding, once the PDFing is done. Does that make more sense?
Thanks.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:34 PM
To: Gigi Sohn; Sagar Doshi; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Kim Hart; Eric Feigenbaum
Cc: Kris Monteith; D'wana Terry
Subject: RE: OI Emails into ECFS
Correct.
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:33 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Sagar Doshi; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Kim Hart; Eric Feigenbaum
Cc: Kris Monteith; D'wana Terry
Subject: RE: OI Emails into ECFS
And just to clarify – these 485K emails that have been received since July 18 are the ones that have
not received a response from the Chairman?
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 4:16 PM
To: Gigi Sohn; Sagar Doshi; David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Kim Hart; Eric Feigenbaum
Cc: Kris Monteith; D'wana Terry
Subject: OI Emails into ECFS
I wanted to follow-up quickly on the questions that came up at our recent meeting about the OI e-
mail box.
Rate of Uploading E-Mails into PDFs. CGB’s IT person (Brian Ulmer) will be able to upload OI emails
into PDFs at a rate of 50,000 per half hour. Although he’s out today, he’ll return on Monday and will
be able to do the uploading on Monday (and continuing into Tuesday, if necessary). There are
currently about 485,000 emails in the mailbox, which have all been received since July 18 th (when
the initial comment round closed).
Rate of Responding to E-Mails through Remedy Database. The Remedy database is able to send
out blast responses to e-mails at a rate of 800-1000 messages per hour. This would be done for the
485,000 emails after the current comment cycle ends on September 15 th (and after copies of the
emails have been PDF’ed by CGB, the PDFs sent to Erik’s team for redaction, and then entered into
the ECFS record by CGB). We are open to adopting a quicker solution to this issue (and the PDF
issue as well) should ITC be aware of any.
Suggested E-Mail Response to Commenters:
“The public comment cycle of the ongoing Open Internet proceeding just closed on September
15th. We've heard from many people throughout the country about this critical issue, and I'm very
glad that we can include your thoughts and opinions.
I'm a strong supporter of the Open Internet, and I will fight to keep the internet open. Thanks for
sharing your views with me.
Tom Wheeler
Chairman
Federal Communications Commission”
_______
By way of background, here are the two messages that were sent to the first round of commenters
(through July 18 th ):
For positive messages…
Thank you very much for contacting us about the ongoing Open Internet proceeding. We're hoping
to hear from as many people as possible about this critical issue, and so I'm very glad that we can
include your thoughts and opinions.
I'm a strong supporter of the Open Internet, and I will fight to keep the internet open. Thanks again
for sharing your views with me.
Tom Wheeler
Chairman
Federal Communications Commission
For negative messages…
Thank you for sharing your views with us about the ongoing Open Internet proceeding. I'm a strong
supporter of the Open Internet, and I will fight to keep the internet open. Thanks again for your
email.
Tom Wheeler
Chairman
Federal Communications Commission
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield; Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet;
Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Press answers for today
Date: Friday, September 12, 2014 3:45:46 PM
Yes, also confirmed with Erik who knows much more of the system than I. :-)
For all: Even for entries we receive that don’t need conversion to PDF, CGB has the option to review them
before they’re considered “processed”.
If CGB wanted, that processing step before making ECFS count could be more automatic – and CGB could
always pull a comment back from ECFS if someone complains for extremely obscene material, etc.
Just a thought?
-d.
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 2:59 PM
To: David Bray; Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Press answers for today
Erik confirms that my language is correct regarding PDFs (i.e. PDF is the only way the public sees the files, not
html, etc)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 2:39 PM
To: Mark Wigfield; Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Press answers for today
Hi Mark - before a release can you chat with Erik on the conversion process and whether the comments
received in ECFS show up in HTML form even if they aren't converted to PDF?
I'll be out of this meeting w/ Gigi after 1530 and can also follow-up.
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 02:33 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: David Bray; Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew
Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Press answers for today
FYI, here is what I will send shortly on background. Please let me know if you see any problems:
Q. Politico asks for confirmation that there was a backlog, and will note that today the only new thing that has
come across the system is an Aug 25 comment from something called Blaze, and asks why:
Answer: a surge of comments did cause ECFS to slow down. We immediately applied fixes, but are still working
through a backlog of filings. In order to ensure that we receive all comments, we have temporarily suspended
conversion of filings into PDF – a conversion that is required in order for the public to view the filings in ECFS.
Suspension of this function enables us to devote more system resources to receiving comments. We will restore
conversion as soon as possible. No comments have been lost, and all will be in the record.
Comm Daily just asks for the numbers. Will use these talking points:
A. Our system is processing the large volume of comments submitted via ECFS, and our system is catching up on
the backlog. For now we have turned-off conversion of comments received into PDFs so we can use all
resources to receive comments. We will provide an accurate total number of comments received as soon as we
are able.
Q. If comments aren’t showing up in the system, does that mean they have been lost?
A. No, no comments have been lost. Our system is processing the high volume of comments received, so it may
take some time for the comments to show up in our system. They will all be part of the record. For now we
have turned-off conversion of comments received into PDFs and entered into ECFS so we can use all resources
to receive comments.
Q. When will you have a tally of comments received?
A. Our system is catching up on processing the volume of comments. In addition, we have provided a third
avenue for submitting comments. Our team is working to
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 12:27 PM
To: Mark Wigfield; Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan
Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Yes - conversion of comments received into PDF form has been turned off so we can devote all
computing resources to receiving comments.
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 12:13 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn; Eric
Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero;
Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Politico has noticed that a general search of ECFS for the latest filings produces no documents for today in any
docket; I just tried it and the latest results are 9/10; I assume this is still a backlog issue but confirming that that
is the case before I reiterate our talking point from yesterday.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 12:09 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric
Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Noon numbers:
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Tuesday, Sept 9 7520 492,443 40,126 911,252 1,403,695
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107
1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
(2:00) 123,525 669,668 91,123 1,139,221
1,808,889
(4:00) 139,063 685,206 93,539 1,141,637 1,826,843
Fri, Sept 12 (9:30) 70,523 861,035 34,344 1,175,981 2,037,016
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107
1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 12:55 PM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane
Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
I’ve filled in the chart below with the 9:30 and noon numbers for today.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 9:45 AM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane
Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
As of 9:30 today:
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI Email Total OI Email Cumulative Total
85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107 1,750,435
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 8:14 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Per David, we’ve received 70,175 comments in ECFS so far today. I will schedule a call for 10 a.m. so the team
can get an update on what we are seeing and the plan for today.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:27 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Good morning. Can we get yesterday's total?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:40 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received
E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Thurs, Sept 11(9:30) 85,932 632,328 70,009 1,118,107
1,750,435
(noon) 109,818 655,961 80,555 1,128,653 1,784,614
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 5:34 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Re: Needed: Numbers Update
Can we get the latest numbers?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
All in one place:
As of noon
Total comments received 9/10: 73,606
Cumulative total: 1,477, 301
Of the 73,606:
ECFS: 29,177/521,620 (so far)
Mailbox: 44,429/955,681.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:36 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
OI Mailbox – 44,429 new comments as of noon, for a cumulative total of 955,681. Thanks.
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:20 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Sorry, that’s 29,177 since yesterday. (I have a calculator with a bad display.)
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 1:18 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
The ECFS numbers as of 12 noon are at 521,620. That’s 23,111 ne comments in ECFS since
yesterday’s numbers. I’m in the process of getting the OI mailbox numbers. Thanks.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 12:58 PM
To: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi
Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Sara Morris; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew
DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Needed: Numbers Update
IT/CGB,
Can we get a numbers update as of 12:00/12:30? Are we experiencing any issues with ECFS or the mail box so
far?
As a reminder, we will need another data pull at 5:00/5:30.
Thanks,
Shannon
Day Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI E-mail Total OI E-mail Cumulative
comments Comments Box Emails Box totals
received received Received E-mails
received
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
Tuesday, Sept 9 7520 492,443 40,126 911,252 1,403,695
Thank you.
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 1:15 PM
To: Kim Hart; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn; Michael Carowitz; Stephanie
Weiner; Kimberly Wild; Matthew DelNero
Subject: RE: Proposed language on comments
Works for me. If anyone asks for more detail, the 3 million mark is for “raw” comments received
with no processing nor analysis.
From: Kim Hart
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 1:14 PM
To: David Bray; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn; Michael Carowitz; Stephanie
Weiner; Kimberly Wild; Matthew DelNero
Subject: RE: Proposed language on comments
Recommend saying "comments received". At any given time, we can tell you how many we
received (that's the "raw" number) -- that doesn't require waiting for processing.
-----Original Message-----
From: Kim Hart
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 12:45 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn; David Bray; Michael
Carowitz; Stephanie Weiner; Kimberly Wild; Matthew DelNero
Subject: RE: Proposed language on comments
Last Thursday we told reporters we could not provide an accurate snapshot of how many we had received because
our system was catching up on processing the comments. We said we would provide an updated number when our
system had caught up on processing comments, so I was trying to be consistent.
That being said, we can say "received" if that's the accurate characterization at this point. How many have been
processed?
-----Original Message-----
From: Kris Monteith
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 12:01 PM
To: Erik Scheibert; Kim Hart; Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn; David Bray; Michael Carowitz; Stephanie Weiner;
Kimberly Wild; Matthew DelNero
Subject: RE: Proposed language on comments
I had the exact same reaction -- will lead to questions about what processed means. I think received is better.
-----Original Message-----
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 12:00 PM
To: Kim Hart; Shannon Gilson; Gigi Sohn; David Bray; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; Stephanie Weiner;
Kimberly Wild; Matthew DelNero
Subject: Re: Proposed language on comments
Not sure I would say processed. Suggest we say received. We have not processed them yet.
Thank you,
Erik
---
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
445 Twelfth Street SW.
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-1248
>Proposed:
>
>“We have passed the 3 million mark for Open Internet comments processed.
>We are still receiving and processing comments, and we and will provide
>updates soon.”
>
>Twitter will probably be the vehicle for this. Edits/feedback welcome.
>
>Kim
>
From: Gigi Sohn
To: Diane Cornell; TW
Cc: Sagar Doshi; Deborah Ridley
Subject: RE: suggested e mail to CGB & OMR teams
Date: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 5:06:52 PM
Neil too.
From: Diane Cornell
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 5:05 PM
To: TW
Cc: Sagar Doshi; Deborah Ridley; Gigi Sohn
Subject: suggested e mail to CGB & OMR teams
Addressees:
OMR:
Shannon
Kim
Mark
Bartees
Brittany
CGB:
Sharon Bowers
Teresa Flasher
Brian Ulmer
Kim Wild
Harrison Cox
Melissa Askew
Kris Monteith
Michael Carowitz
To put it mildly, this has been an unprecedented week for the Commission. We had more OI
comments in the last week (~2 million) than have existed in any one proceeding or topic in the
history of the FCC.
There are a lot of wheels turning behind the scenes here, and you’re the ones turning the cranks.
Thank you for the above-and-beyond work you’ve done over this last week – including evenings and
weekend time.
The job’s not over yet, and it’ll get busier before it gets easier. But in the meantime, thanks once
more for your great work!
T
Tom Wheeler
Chairman, Federal Communications Commission
From: Gigi Sohn
To: Diane Cornell; TW
Cc: Sagar Doshi; Deborah Ridley
Subject: RE: suggested e mail to CGB & OMR teams
Date: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 9:01:34 PM
I checked with Kim on the number situation last Friday in case removing
dupes would cause confusion. Kim, feel free to weigh in, but I believe you
said that you’ve pitched the 3.7 number as raw and unprocessed, and that
adjustments may come. I don’t see any confusion with that, then.
Sagar
>Including OMR -- if it changes the count, are we (Team FCC) fine with
>saying the 3.7 million was the raw "unprocessed" number before we went
>through an analyzed for any duplicates?
>
>More importantly for Erik, if opt to remove for duplicates with this
>second round, how long will that take to do the scan?
>
>Many thanks.
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Matthew DelNero
>Sent: Monday, September 22, 2014 4:17 PM
>To: Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi; David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn;
>Claude Aiken
>Subject: RE: Two items on the processing of comments
>
>That's fine with me too. My only question is whether that significantly
>changes the count (i.e., are we still hitting at least 3.7 million)?
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Erik Scheibert
>Sent: Monday, September 22, 2014 4:16 PM
>To: Sagar Doshi; Matthew DelNero; David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi
>Sohn; Claude Aiken
>Subject: Re: Two items on the processing of comments
>
>The duplicates were removed during the first filing window so I’m
>suggesting doing the same now.
>
>
>Erik
>---
>Erik Scheibert
>DCIO for Technology
>Federal Communications Commission
>445 Twelfth Street SW.
>Washington, DC 20554
>Office: (202) 418-1248
>
>
>
>
>
>On 9/22/14, 4:00 PM, someone claiming to be "Sagar Doshi"
><[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>HmmŠ I think we¹d actually want to remove duplicates (and I also agree
>>on the definition you laid out), since they provide no extra value to
>>the proceeding, while still counting how many there are.
>>
>>Thoughts?
>>Sagar
>>
>>
>>On 9/22/14, 3:36 PM, "Matthew DelNero" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>>Erik, I might have misread David's original email, but my impression
>>>had been that you were leaving in duplicates -- but that, as noted, IT
>>>would provide a count of duplicates. I agree on your definition of
>>>duplicate.
>>>Thanks.
>>>
>>>Matt
>>>
>>>-----Original Message-----
>>>From: Erik Scheibert
>>>Sent: Monday, September 22, 2014 9:32 AM
>>>To: David Bray; Sagar Doshi; Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi
>>>Sohn
>>>Subject: Re: Two items on the processing of comments
>>>
>>>Just to make sure I¹m on the same page:
>>>We will remove duplicate emails and duplicate is defined as same
>>>sender and same subject and same message body. We will provide a count
>>>of how many duplicates were removed.
>>>
>>>Am I correct on this?
>>>
>>>
>>>Thank you,
>>>Erik
>>>---
>>>Erik Scheibert
>>>DCIO for Technology
>>>Federal Communications Commission
>>>445 Twelfth Street SW.
>>>Washington, DC 20554
>>>Office: (202) 418-1248
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>On 9/18/14, 1:22 PM, someone claiming to be "David Bray"
>>><[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>10-4, I am looping in James and Tony directly (so I'm not a
>>>>bottleneck)
>>>>-- and yes, as they can follow-up with Digital Reasoning about what
>>>>might be possible.
>>>>
>>>>Onwards and upwards together!
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>-----Original Message-----
>>>>From: Sagar Doshi
>>>>Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2014 01:00 PM Eastern Standard Time
>>>>To: Matthew DelNero; David Bray; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn
>>>>Cc: Erik Scheibert
>>>>Subject: Re: Two items on the processing of comments
>>>>
>>>>Yeah, agreed, Matt.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>David, it would be interesting for us to say, we received 3.7 million
>>>>comments, out of which 500K were full and complete duplicates (and
>>>>note that dupes are defined as same sender, message, and subject), so
>>>>then we could report a separate data point of the # of unique
>>>>comments into our system.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Sagar
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>From: Matthew DelNero <[email protected]>
>>>>Date: Thursday, September 18, 2014 at 12:25 PM
>>>>To: David Bray <[email protected]>, Stephanie Weiner
>>>><[email protected]>, Gigi Sohn <[email protected]>
>>>>Cc: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>, Sagar Doshi
>>>><[email protected]>
>>>>Subject: RE: Two items on the processing of comments
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>David, thanks for getting back to me. I conferred with Sagar and we
>>>>agreed that the approach you describe re: duplicates sounds fine. We
>>>>would, however, like to get the count with duplicates & without
>>>>duplicates once the digital reasoning tool is up and running. I
>>>>think Tony and James are coordinating that, so if you wouldn¹t mind
>>>>passing this point along to them we would appreciate it. (Or just
>>>>let us know if we should do so.) Thanks again.
>>>>
>>>>Matt
>>>>
>>>>From:David Bray
>>>>Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2014 8:40 AM
>>>>To: Matthew DelNero; Stephanie Weiner; Gigi Sohn
>>>>Cc: Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi
>>>>Subject: RE: Two items on the processing of comments
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Not quickly using ECFS -- the challenge is you will have to index all
>>>>3.7 million and then for each index look for ones that match.
>>>>
>>>>The cloud-based Digital Reasoning solution can do this better however
>>>>that is post-processing?
>>>>
>>>>Hope this helps.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>-----Original Message-----
>>>>From: Matthew DelNero
>>>>Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2014 07:12 AM Eastern Standard Time
>>>>To: Stephanie Weiner; David Bray; Gigi Sohn
>>>>Cc: Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi
>>>>Subject: Re: Two items on the processing of comments Thanks.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>David, is it possible (without too much trouble) to find out how many
>>>>duplicates there are in the current batch?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Matt
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Matthew S. DelNero
>>>>Deputy Bureau Chief, WCB
>>>>Federal Communications Commission
>>>>202.418.7433
>>>>
>>>>From:Stephanie Weiner
>>>>
>>>>Sent:Wednesday, September 17, 2014 9:55 PM
>>>>
>>>>To:David Bray; Matthew DelNero; Gigi Sohn
>>>>
>>>>Cc:Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi
>>>>
>>>>Subject:RE: Two items on the processing of comments
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Thanks Matt. On 2, I'll send a note out to the OGC experts on this
>>>>and get back to you asap in the morning. But my instinct is that
>>>>this is about FCC internal procedures and not enshrined in our
>>>>rules. If so, then I think it would just require someone from OCH to
>>>>provide this direction to OS.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Stephanie
>>>>________________________________________
>>>>
>>>>From:David Bray
>>>>Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 9:02 PM
>>>>To: Matthew DelNero; Gigi Sohn
>>>>Cc: Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi; Stephanie Weiner
>>>>Subject: RE: Two items on the processing of comments
>>>>
>>>>Her's what I have on duplication/de-duplication -- Erik can correct
>>>>me if I miss something:
>>>>
>>>>The de-duplication is for same sender, subject, and message (match
>>>>all).
>>>>If the sender sends multiple entries with different text we will
>>>>accept them all. Same if the body is the same but the sender is
>>>>different.
>>>>
>>>>Hope this helps,
>>>>
>>>>-d.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>-----Original Message-----
>>>>From: Matthew DelNero
>>>>Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 07:27 PM Eastern Standard Time
>>>>To: David Bray; Gigi Sohn
>>>>Cc: Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi; Stephanie Weiner
>>>>Subject: RE: Two items on the processing of comments Hi David,
>>>>
>>>>Thanks for your note. On point #1, I¹d find it helpful to have a
>>>>definition of ³duplicate.² I¹m assuming that if the text of the body
>>>>was identical but the submitter names were different, that was not a
>>>>duplicate for round 1 (or 2 for that matter). Could you confirm?
>>>>
>>>>I¹m looping in Stephanie Weiner on point #2. I don¹t think there
>>>>would be a legal issue with the proposed approach but wanted to give
>>>>her a chance to opine.
>>>>
>>>>Matt
>>>>
>>>>From:David Bray
>>>>Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 5:13 PM
>>>>To: Gigi Sohn; Matthew DelNero
>>>>Cc: Erik Scheibert; Sagar Doshi
>>>>Subject: Two items on the processing of comments
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Hi Gigi and Matt,
>>>>
>>>>Two items on the processing of comments:
>>>>
>>>>1. For the first round of comments, CGB wanted IT to remove
>>>>duplicates if they had the same text in the body. In this second
>>>>round however they don¹t want IT to remove duplicates as that would
>>>>reduce the number that¹s been told. We¹ll do whatever anyone wants
>>>>just wanted to flag that this may cause individuals who had their
>>>>comments in the 1st round removed because it was a duplicate to be
>>>>upset that they were *not* removed in the 2nd round?
>>>>2. The current process, after IT has redacted email addresses from
>>>>the PDFs to be uploaded into ECFS is that the Office of the
>>>>Secretary in theory reviews them all and then hits a button to make
>>>>them live.
>>>>We¹re not sure the interface
>>>> for this ³button² can support 2 million comments, and we know that
>>>>the Office of the Secretary is not reviewing them. Would it be
>>>>possible to get an email from OS to say, essentially ³just make them
>>>>live² essentially so we can bypass this additional step?
>>>>
>>>>Many thanks,
>>>>
>>>>-d.
>>>>
From: Sagar Doshi
To: Gigi Sohn; Tony Summerlin; David Bray; James Miller; Kim Hart; Neil Grace; Stevan Jechura; Matthew DelNero;
Claude Aiken; Eric Feigenbaum; Regina Black; Erik Scheibert; Kris Monteith; Michael Carowitz; D"wana Terry;
Stephanie Weiner
Subject: RE: What to do for the OI inbox (summary of our meeting)
Date: Friday, September 12, 2014 5:20:04 PM
Shannon,
Per Diane’s request, WCB has the following upcoming filing deadlines:
9/11/14
Two Petitions for Waiver of eligible recovery rules [not many comments expected] (07‐135, 01‐92, 10‐90) –
comments due
Section 214 transaction (14‐132) – comments due
Section 214 transaction (14‐129) – comments due
9/15/14
Open Internet NPRM (14‐28) – comments due
E‐rate FNPRM – comments due
9/16/14
AT&T/DTV transaction [this is an MB docket] – comments due
9/18/14
10th NOI Broadband Progress Report (WC Docket No. 14‐126) – reply comments due
E‐rate Eligible Services Lists (CC DKT No. 02‐6, GN DKT No. 09‐51, WC DKT No. 13‐184) – reply comments due
Section 214 transaction (Team Telecom) (WC Docket No. 14‐138) – comments due
Section 214 transaction (14‐132) – reply comments due
Section 214 transaction (14‐129) – reply comments due
Let us know if you have any questions or if you need anything further.
Kirk Burgee
Chief of Staff
Wireline Competition Bureau
1
Andrea Kearney
Thank you!
From: David Furth
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 3:11 PM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Diane Cornell; David Simpson; Lisa Fowlkes
Subject: RE: URGENT: upcoming comment deadlines
Shannon:
We’re not aware of any PSHSB filing deadlines coming up in the next week that would be affected.
David
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: Diane Cornell
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 1:07 PM
To: Travis LeBlanc; Kris Monteith; David Simpson; Roger Sherman; Julius Knapp; Troy Tanner; William Lake; Julie Veach
Cc: Paula Blizzard; David Kolker; Mark Stone; Holly Saurer; Lisa Fowlkes; David Furth; Jim Schlichting; John Leibovitz;
Jessica Almond; Kirk Burgee; Carol Mattey; Matthew DelNero; Shannon Gilson; Kim Hart; Gigi Sohn
Subject: URGENT: upcoming comment deadlines
Importance: High
Hi Folks-
As I mentioned Monday at the B/OCs meeting, we anticipate that there could be a very large volume of comments filed
in ECFS between tomorrow and September 16th. Can you please let Shannon in OMR know by 3pm today (9/9),
if possible, of any other comment filing deadlines for this week OR early next that could potentially be affected by an
ECFS slowdown?
Thanks
Diane
Diane Cornell
Special Counsel
Office of Chairman Tom Wheeler
Federal Communications Commission
202-418-0899
[email protected]
1
Andrea Kearney
We have an addition, which is included in the body of Kirk’s email below.
From: Kirk Burgee
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 3:25 PM
To: Shannon Gilson
Cc: Diane Cornell; WCBFO; Pamela Arluk; Randy Clarke; Denise Coca; Elizabeth McIntyre; Vickie Robinson; TAPD
Managers
Subject: Upcoming Comment Deadlines
Shannon,
Per Diane’s request, WCB has the following upcoming filing deadlines:
9/11/14
Two Petitions for Waiver of eligible recovery rules [not many comments expected] (07‐135, 01‐92, 10‐90) –
comments due
Section 214 transaction (14‐132) – comments due
Section 214 transaction (14‐129) – comments due
9/15/14
Open Internet NPRM (14‐28) – comments due
E‐rate FNPRM – comments due
Rural Broadband Experiments FNPRM – reply comments due
9/16/14
AT&T/DTV transaction [this is an MB docket] – comments due
9/18/14
10th NOI Broadband Progress Report (WC Docket No. 14‐126) – reply comments due
E‐rate Eligible Services Lists (CC DKT No. 02‐6, GN DKT No. 09‐51, WC DKT No. 13‐184) – reply comments due
Section 214 transaction (Team Telecom) (WC Docket No. 14‐138) – comments due
Section 214 transaction (14‐132) – reply comments due
1
Section 214 transaction (14‐129) – reply comments due
Let us know if you have any questions or if you need anything further.
Kirk Burgee
Chief of Staff
Wireline Competition Bureau
2
Andrea Kearney
sure
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 2:39 PM
To: Mark Wigfield; Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet;
Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Press answers for today
Hi Mark - before a release can you chat with Erik on the conversion process and whether the comments
received in ECFS show up in HTML form even if they aren't converted to PDF?
I'll be out of this meeting w/ Gigi after 1530 and can also follow-up.
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 02:33 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: David Bray; Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling;
Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: Press answers for today
FYI, here is what I will send shortly on background. Please let me know if you see any problems:
Q. Politico asks for confirmation that there was a backlog, and will note that today the only new thing that has come
across the system is an Aug 25 comment from something called Blaze, and asks why:
Answer: a surge of comments did cause ECFS to slow down. We immediately applied fixes, but are still working through
a backlog of filings. In order to ensure that we receive all comments, we have temporarily suspended conversion of
filings into PDF – a conversion that is required in order for the public to view the filings in ECFS. Suspension of this
function enables us to devote more system resources to receiving comments. We will restore conversion as soon as
possible. No comments have been lost, and all will be in the record.
Comm Daily just asks for the numbers. Will use these talking points:
1
A. Our system is processing the large volume of comments submitted via ECFS, and our system is catching up on the
backlog. For now we have turned‐off conversion of comments received into PDFs so we can use all resources to receive
comments. We will provide an accurate total number of comments received as soon as we are able.
Q. If comments aren’t showing up in the system, does that mean they have been lost?
A. No, no comments have been lost. Our system is processing the high volume of comments received, so it may take
some time for the comments to show up in our system. They will all be part of the record. For now we have turned‐off
conversion of comments received into PDFs and entered into ECFS so we can use all resources to receive comments.
Q. When will you have a tally of comments received?
A. Our system is catching up on processing the volume of comments. In addition, we have provided a third avenue for
submitting comments. Our team is working to
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 12:27 PM
To: Mark Wigfield; Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson; Erik Scheibert; Tony Summerlin
Cc: ITleadership; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet;
Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Yes - conversion of comments received into PDF form has been turned off so we can devote all computing
resources to receiving comments.
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 12:13 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Kimberly Wild; Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum;
Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Politico has noticed that a general search of ECFS for the latest filings produces no documents for today in any docket; I
just tried it and the latest results are 9/10; I assume this is still a backlog issue but confirming that that is the case before
I reiterate our talking point from yesterday.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 12:09 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Kris Monteith; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum;
Andrew Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell
Subject: RE: Needed: Numbers Update
Noon numbers:
2
Monday, Sept 8 422 484,923 10,405 871,126 1,356,049
5
Andrea Kearney
I will repent once we get through tomorrow. I think the reasonable expectation should be that ECFS will be overloaded –
intent aside – and if isn’t huzzahs all around. To be sure, are there capacity issues with the email account or are there no
concerns on that front?
From: Gigi Sohn
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 7:01 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Sara Morris; Tony Summerlin; Diane Cornell; Jonathan Sallet; Matthew DelNero; Neil Grace; Mark
Wigfield; Stephanie Weiner
Cc: David Bray; Eric Feigenbaum; Sagar Doshi
Subject: FW: Comments sent to [email protected]
Repent ye cynics (although the end result might be the same)! Shannon, I'll leave it to you to share this with the
larger group if you deem it necessary.
-----Original Message-----
From: Holmes Wilson (b) (6)
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2014 06:42 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Marvin Ammori
Cc: Gigi Sohn; David Segal; David Bray; Sagar Doshi
Subject: Re: Comments sent to [email protected]
We’re excited to break records tomorrow for public participation in the FCC’s process!
Our site is smoothing out the volume of comments so there won’t be the same spikes as there would be if we
linked people directly to your site. That should help a lot.
1
Our biggest focus right now is making sure everyone’s comments get submitted and counted. Our developer
will be extremely busy tomorrow, but if you have any site problems let us know, and I’ll make it a top priority
for him.
Thanks!
—Holmes
+ Holmes Wilson
I finally tracked down enough folks throughout the day to determine that:
1) We just don't control enough of the volume to be able to guarantee anything at all. Other folks are doing
widgets and tools, etc. and they're coordinating but their technology is independent.
And
2) We’re going to try our best to make it manageable on our end, and you should ping us if it goes down or there are
issues.
Ping Holmes Wilson at <(b) (6) > + David + me by email.
Here's my cell phone number if you can't get through to us by email. (Holmes will be most useful.)
(b) (6) .
Principal
Ammori Group
Principal
Ammori Group
Marvin told me that you are concerned that the FCC is undercounting the net neutrality comments sent to
[email protected]. Let me assure you that this is not the case. The comment count that appears on the
ECFS page for the net neutrality docket is lower than the official count because many of the comments sent
through the email box were put together in several pdfs that were then uploaded to the ECFS. But the official
count, now 1,345, 543 (noted in today’s Politico MT) counts every one of those emailed comments as a separate
comment. We’ve been really careful about being transparent about the real number of comments filed.
2
I’ve included the FCC’s CIO David Bray, and the Chairman’s Special Assistant Sagar Doshi, who are deeply
involved in this.
As I’m sure Marvin has told you, it would be far better both for us and for the folks you are encouraging to file
if they would do so through the email address. We’d prefer if folks weren’t frustrated in their attempts to file
comments, and we hope you feel the same.
Many thanks, and we’d be happy to answer any questions or address other concerns. Best, Gigi
3
Andrea Kearney
Recurrence: (none)
(b) (4)
Participant Access Code: (b) (4) & Host Access Code: (b)
(4)
_____________________________________________
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 2:38 PM
To: Shannon Gilson; Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew
Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins;
Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Can we do a quick call? The answer below is for July 18th‐onwards, do we have the count for the entire 14‐28 period?
And do we know how many we should subtract from ECFS as OI emails that were uploaded? Can we run a search for
“Various” in ECFS for 14‐28 to compute this number?
Many thanks,
‐d.
From: Shannon Gilson
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 2:33 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; Kimberly Wild; David Bray; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew
Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins;
Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
IT/CGB teams, do you concur on these numbers?
1
From: Michael Carowitz
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 2:32 PM
To: Kimberly Wild; David Bray; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew
Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins;
Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Per David’s question, there are 33 numerous/various PDFs of snail mail and faxes entered into ECFS since July 18th.
These 33 PDFs include 66,899 items. Therefore, our final number should show the total number below, plus 66,899
faxes/postal letters, minus the 33 numerous/various PDFs (which are essentially containers) = 3,767,829.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 1:31 PM
To: Michael Carowitz; David Bray; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew
Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins;
Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Updated to reflect midnight ECFS and CSV numbers.
From: Kimberly Wild
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2014 12:14 AM
To: Michael Carowitz; David Bray; Kris Monteith; Erik Scheibert; Shannon Gilson
Cc: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Bartees Cox; Neil Grace; Mark Wigfield; Gigi Sohn; Eric Feigenbaum; Andrew
Woelfling; Jonathan Sallet; Stephanie Weiner; Julie Veach; Matthew DelNero; Diane Cornell; Sagar Doshi; Jon Wilkins;
Charles Aaron; Sharon Bowers; Teresa Flasher
Subject: RE: OI Numbers Update
Midnight OI count
Daily ECFS Total ECFS Daily OI email Total OI email Daily CSV T
Day Date Time comments comments comments comments comments co
received received received received received re
Monday 8-Sep Evening 422 484,923 10,405 871,126
2
Friday 12-Sep 1200 82,348 872,860 39,842 1,181,479
3
Andrea Kearney
Recurrence: (none)
Dial in number for those who need it:
(b) (4) Code: (b) (4)
1
Andrea Kearney
Fyi re: ECFS below -- this appears to be an issue with the indexing of new records. Erik and team have
proposed a new index solution and will do this in the next 10 minutes.
-----Original Message-----
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 06:36 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: ITleadership; Tony Summerlin; Charles Aaron
Subject: ECFS
ECFS is experiencing issues. Some users able to submit but significant numbers receiving errors.
Erik
1
Andrea Kearney
Hi Shannon, Gigi, Jon, and Diane,
Currently quiet at the moment. This evening was around 50,000 ‐‐ several times higher than after the viral video in June,
about 1/2 the highest high we saw in July.
Will provide updates if the situation changes.
________________________________________
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 7:43 AM
To: David Bray; ITleadership; Charles Aaron; Tony Summerlin
Subject: Re: Checking re: our web and ECFS status?
Quiet at the moment. Had some activity overnight. ECFS hits per hour attached.
Erik
‐‐‐
Erik Scheibert
DCIO for Technology
Federal Communications Commission
445 Twelfth Street SW.
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418‐1248
On 9/10/14, 7:40 AM, someone claiming to be "David Bray"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Dear Team,
>
>
>Are we seeing any increased activity with the website or ECFS?
>
>Of note:
>http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the‐switch/wp/2014/09/09/how‐wednes
>day s‐internet‐slowdown‐is‐supposed‐to‐work/
><http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the‐switch/wp/2014/09/09/how‐wedne
1
>sda ys‐internet‐slowdown‐is‐supposed‐to‐work/>
>
>Many thanks,
>
>‐d.
>
2
From: Chris Bing
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Will Wiquist; Neil Grace
Subject: Re: [FEDSCOOP] - FCC experiences DDoS?
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 4:29:50 PM
Thanks David.
No problem. Just sent similar questions separately to the general press email.
Hi Chris,
Happy to help – that said, can you route through OMR as they have some answers already
available and then we can go from there? Many thanks.
Hi David,
My colleague Billy Mitchell sent me your contact information. I am curious about this
DDoS story. I have a few questions -- also available by phone: 240-688-7636
1.) Was the DDoS limited to only the comment section of the FCC's website? Were other
services affected? Do you have any idea for why this occurred or who did this attack?
2.) How were you able to confirm this incident was in fact a DDoS rather than pure internet
traffic? How do you define a DDoS attack -- can you provide any additional technical details
like the amount of traffic? For long did the disruption last?
--
Christopher Bing
Cybersecurity Reporter
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
Mobile P: (b) (6)
Office P: 609-747-2321
--
Christopher Bing
Cybersecurity Reporter
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
Mobile P: (b) (6)
Office P: 609-747-2321
From: David Bray
To: Kartikeya Iyer
Subject: Re: About the CIO statement on the FCC being the victims of an alleged DDoS attack
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 6:00:33 AM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
The FCC is saying that the site hosting their comment system was attacked at the exact same
time comments would have started flooding in from John Oliver’s viral "Last Week Tonight"
segment about net neutrality. The media widely reported that the surge in comments crashed
the FCC’s site.
- The FCC is being intentionally misleading, and trying to claim that the surge in traffic
from large numbers of people attempting to access their site through John Oliver’s
GoFCCYourself.com redirect amounts to a “DDoS” attack, to let themselves off the hook for
essentially silencing large numbers of people by not having a properly functioning site to
receive comments from the public about an important issue, or—worst case—is preparing a
bogus legal argument that somehow John Oliver’s show itself was the DDoS attack.
- Someone actually did DDoS the FCC’s site at the exact same time as John Oliver’s
segment, in order to actively prevent people from being able to comment in support of keeping
the Title II net neutrality rules many of us fought for in 2015.
Given the current FCC chairman Ajit Pai’s open hostility ( https://www.theguardian.com/
technology/2017/apr/26/trump-overturn-net-neutrality-rules-resistance ) towards real net
neutrality (notwithstanding the blatant sham that is the laughably-titled "Restoring Internet
Freedom"), and the telecom industry’s long history of astroturfing (
https://news.vice.com/article/cable-companies-are-astroturfing-fake-consumer-support-to-end-
net-neutrality ) and paying shady organizations ( https://motherboard.vice.com/
en_us/article/shady-conservative-group-is-flooding-the-fcc-with-anti-net-neutrality-comments
) to influence the FCC, either of these scenarios should be concerning for anyone who cares
about government transparency, free speech, and the future of the Internet.
To validate the claims of being "DDoS"ed, The FCC should release original untampered
server logs to qualified independent & unaffiliated security researchers. Not doing this will
merely lend credence and substantiation to claims that the FCC is being less-than-truthful
about this matter, and in fact is actively preventing members of the public from expressing
and/or formally registering their views on the very important matter of a free and open
Internet.
Thank you,
Kartikeya IYER
From: FCC Office of Media Relations
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:08 PM
Subject: Statement by FCC CIO on Denial-of-Service Attack on FCC Comment System
Media Contact:
Mark Wigfield, (202) 418-0253
[email protected]
“Beginning on Sunday night at midnight, our analysis reveals that the FCC was subject to
multiple distributed denial-of-service attacks (DDos). These were deliberate attempts by external
actors to bombard the FCC’s comment system with a high amount of traffic to our commercial
cloud host. These actors were not attempting to file comments themselves; rather they made it
difficult for legitimate commenters to access and file with the FCC. While the comment system
remained up and running the entire time, these DDoS events tied up the servers and prevented
them from responding to people attempting to submit comments. We have worked with our
commercial partners to address this situation and will continue to monitor developments going
forward.”
###
This is an unofficial announcement of Commission action. Release of the full text of a Commission order constitutes
official action. See MCI v. FCC, 515 F.2d 385 (D.C. Cir. 1974).
Non-Responsive
Media Contact:
Mark Wigfield, (202) 418-0253
[email protected]
###
This is an unofficial announcement of Commission action. Release of the full text of a Commission order constitutes
official action. See MCI v. FCC, 515 F.2d 385 (D.C. Cir. 1974).
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield
Subject: RE: Also, does he have any comment on the bot reports?
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 3:39:00 PM
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Also, does he have any comment on the bot reports?
(b) (5)
From: Kirby, Paul [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 3:14 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Also, does he have any comment on the bot reports?
When he mentioned the alternative filing method, he mentioned the electronic
inbox, but I don’t think he mentioned the API. Stuff filed through the API goes
through the regular process as if someone filed directly in ECFS, correct?
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: Mark Wigfield [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:42 PM
To: Kirby, Paul
Subject: RE: Also, does he have any comment on the bot reports?
No, not related. The change in dissemination schedules (i.e., making the comments available for the
public to view on ECFS) was made to ensure that the high volume of comments could get processed.
The DDos attack traffic tied up access to the servers, but did not actually try to file comments. So
changing dissemination would have no effect on traffic hitting the server.
OK. And did you see my first question: The stuff we discussed on the call is not
related to the DDOS attack, correct?
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: Mark Wigfield [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:17 PM
To: Kirby, Paul
Subject: RE: Also, does he have any comment on the bot reports?
Sorry, wchih reports?
From: Kirby, Paul [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:14 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: Also, does he have any comment on the bot reports?
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield
Subject: RE: Also, does he have any comment on the bot reports?
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:36:00 PM
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:35 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Also, does he have any comment on the bot reports?
(b) (5)
From: Kirby, Paul [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:25 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Also, does he have any comment on the bot reports?
OK. And did you see my first question: The stuff we discussed on the call is not
related to the DDOS attack, correct?
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: Mark Wigfield [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:21 PM
To: Kirby, Paul
Subject: RE: Also, does he have any comment on the bot reports?
Still no comment. Thanks
From: Kirby, Paul [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:19 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Also, does he have any comment on the bot reports?
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
(b) (5)
-----Original Message-----
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:24 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: any indication DDOS is related to Oliver broadcast?
(b) (5)
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:22 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: any indication DDOS is related to Oliver broadcast?
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (4)
(b) (4)
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:17 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: FW: any indication DDOS is related to Oliver broadcast?
(b) (5)
-----Original Message-----
From: Todd Shields (BLOOMBERG/ WASHINGTO) [mailto:tshields3@bloomberg net]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:14 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Cc: Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: any indication DDOS is related to Oliver broadcast?
thnx - ts
------------------------------------------------------------
Todd Shields
Bloomberg News
reporter - Washington
(202) 807-2075 (office)
-- www.bloomberg.net --
(b) (5)
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:22 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: any indication DDOS is related to Oliver broadcast?
(b) (5)
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:20 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: any indication DDOS is related to Oliver broadcast?
(b) (5)
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:19 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: any indication DDOS is related to Oliver broadcast?
(b) (5)
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:17 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: FW: any indication DDOS is related to Oliver broadcast?
(b) (5)
-----Original Message-----
From: Todd Shields (BLOOMBERG/ WASHINGTO) [mailto:tshields3@bloomberg net]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:14 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Cc: Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: any indication DDOS is related to Oliver broadcast?
thnx - ts
------------------------------------------------------------
Todd Shields
Bloomberg News
reporter - Washington
(202) 807-2075 (office)
-- www.bloomberg.net --
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 7:00 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Sounds good. I might suggest Bot-Swarm vs. Attack or "Massive Bot-Bombardment" as
some people think attack=hack which this wasn't and I don't think the person(s) who did it
meant violence?
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:56 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Aye, and some might guess that by creating buzz about the technical aspects of this you
also generate word of moth and articles that share the video.
I can't comment however that might be part of the psychology. Create a spectacle.
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:49 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=92vuuZt7wak
Not sure if this adds or detracts as ideally we don't want the article to. E political,
however Chairman Pai reads some of the mean tweets he received which
shows some of the fervor of the not so nice comments
received: https://youtu.be/iBt84HNAGwU
Can you also send me a link to the show that kicked all this off? Thanks again.
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:24 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
+Here's a slightly shorter URL redirect for the bulk upload option:
https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
On May 18, 2017, at 18:01, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
And here’s a link to a page with the bulk filing mechanism https://www.fcc.gov/restoring-
internet-freedom-comments-wc-docket-no-17-108
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/public-api-docs.html
From: [email protected]
To: Michael Krigsman
Subject: Re: API documentation
Date: Thursday, May 18, 2017 7:00:55 PM
Sounds good. I might suggest Bot-Swarm vs. Attack or "Massive Bot-Bombardment" as some
people think attack=hack which this wasn't and I don't think the person(s) who did it meant
violence?
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:56 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Aye, and some might guess that by creating buzz about the technical aspects of this you also
generate word of moth and articles that share the video.
I can't comment however that might be part of the psychology. Create a spectacle.
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:49 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=92vuuZt7wak
Not sure if this adds or detracts as ideally we don't want the article to. E political,
however Chairman Pai reads some of the mean tweets he received which shows
some of the fervor of the not so nice comments received: https://youtu.be/iBt
84HNAGwU
Can you also send me a link to the show that kicked all this off? Thanks again.
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:35 PM, Michael Krigsman <[email protected]> wrote:
Thanks!
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:24 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
+Here's a slightly shorter URL redirect for the bulk upload option:
https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/public-api-docs.html
From: David Bray
To: Michael Krigsman
Subject: Re: API documentation
Date: Thursday, May 18, 2017 6:59:21 PM
Also if you do talk to the NYTimes API guru -- what makes our lives complicated is it is not
just a pull request of data from our system, we permit push requests to send/public data. I just
sent this email to a different request.
Hi Will,
Answer: Our public API does have set rate limits consistent for every key requested, similar
to Data.gov -- what becomes more challenging is if multiple automated programs use multiple
IP addresses to request multiple keys. The public API allows both the pulling of data from the
system and the sending of data to the system. The FCC did talk to its stakeholders in 2015
about only allowing information to be pulled however some stakeholders wanted the ability to
file a comment in an automated mechanism as they said they had saved comments from other
humans that they were filing for them. Having an API for both pulling and sending data makes
it difficult to require a ReCAPTCHA/NoCAPTCHA since an API bypasses such a test for
whether someone is a human.
Aye, and some might guess that by creating buzz about the technical aspects of this you also
generate word of moth and articles that share the video.
I can't comment however that might be part of the psychology. Create a spectacle.
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:49 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=92vuuZt7wak
Not sure if this adds or detracts as ideally we don't want the article to. E political,
however Chairman Pai reads some of the mean tweets he received which shows
some of the fervor of the not so nice comments received: https://youtu.be/
iBt84HNAGwU
Can you also send me a link to the show that kicked all this off? Thanks again.
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:35 PM, Michael Krigsman <[email protected]> wrote:
Thanks!
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:24 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
+Here's a slightly shorter URL redirect for the bulk upload option:
https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
And here’s a link to a page with the bulk filing mechanism https://www.fcc.gov/restoring-
internet-freedom-comments-wc-docket-no-17-108
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/public-api-docs.html
From: [email protected]
To: Michael Krigsman
Subject: Re: API documentation
Date: Thursday, May 18, 2017 6:56:41 PM
Aye, and some might guess that by creating buzz about the technical aspects of this you also
generate word of moth and articles that share the video.
I can't comment however that might be part of the psychology. Create a spectacle.
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:49 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=92vuuZt7wak
Not sure if this adds or detracts as ideally we don't want the article to. E political,
however Chairman Pai reads some of the mean tweets he received which shows
some of the fervor of the not so nice comments received: https://youtu.be/
iBt84HNAGwU
Can you also send me a link to the show that kicked all this off? Thanks again.
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:35 PM, Michael Krigsman <[email protected]> wrote:
Thanks!
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:24 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
+Here's a slightly shorter URL redirect for the bulk upload option:
https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
And here’s a link to a page with the bulk filing mechanism https://www.fcc.gov/restoring-
internet-freedom-comments-wc-docket-no-17-108
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/public-api-docs.html
From: David Bray
To: Paul Miller
Subject: Re: Astroturfing of FCC comments
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 2:17:32 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations. This
is a challenge of the modern age, anyone and everyone can leave a comment and we do not
block anyone. FCC experts will later review.
David,
Your comment site is being astroturfed by a bot. Specifically proceeding 17-108 is being hit hard
with repetitive comments against Title 2 regulations. These synthetic comments should be
discounted completely or consolidated to a single comment when being weighed in the decision.
You will notice large variance in verbiage of legitimate comments and should take care not to give
credence to bot generated comments.
“The unprecedented regulatory power the Obama Administration imposed on the internet is
smothering innovation, damaging the American economy and obstructing job creation. I urge the
Federal Communications Commission to end the bureaucratic regulatory overreach of the internet
known as Title II and restore the bipartisan light-touch regulatory consensus that enabled the
internet to flourish for more than 20 years. The plan currently under consideration at the FCC to
repeal Obama's Title II power grab is a positive step forward and will help to promote a truly free
and open internet for everyone.”
The logic used in the bot generated comments is fallacious as well. The way the internet operated
under title 1 protections was good only because the technology and market for manipulating
content access was not mature. As the market for such manipulations developed ISPs built
mechanisms to provide these manipulations and filed suit against the FCC to gain the rights to do so.
In 2015 the FCC made the correct decision regarding ISPs by placing them into title 2 regulations.
This is where they belong and where they should stay.
Thanks!
Paul Miller
Sr. Solutions Architect
Threadfin Business Solutions
(561)299-0319
http://www.threadfin.com/
Threadfin Business Solutions is an IT services company, primarily focused on advanced and emerging technologies. Our Convergence
SM
Consultants deliver professional services around Advanced Infrastructure, Unified Communications, Messaging, and Virtualization.
From: Mark Wigfield
To: Matthew Berry; David Bray; Mark Stephens; Tony Summerlin (CTR); Nicholas Degani; Brian Hart
Subject: (b) (5)
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:03:43 PM
(b) (5)
-----Original Message-----
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 1:05 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: (b) (5)
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 1:03 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: (b) (5)
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:10 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani
<[email protected]>
Subject: (b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
To: Frank Konkel
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: Re: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 2:37:17 PM
Hi Frank,
Unknown on bandwidth -- since this was an application-level attack it was more about the
API's capacity to receive API calls and distribute those requests to the elastic infrastructure of
the cloud. We did spin up more virtual servers in the cloud however the API was the
bottleneck -- and as mentioned the number of API calls per minute that were filing a comment
were *much* much smaller than the # of API calls that were just tying up the API with high
traffic or junk data.
-d.
Thanks David.
One question: Any idea and how much bandwidth the attackers used to paralyze the site? I've
seen estimates of other attacks in the hundreds of megs/sec range, but any idea here?
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 1:06 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
My apologies Mark, sorry I just got this message -- Frank asked for the link to the bulk
upload solution, here it is: https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
Also Frank, on background here is the link to info on the Pokémon Go DDoS attacks: Akin
to the Pokemon attack: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/
gaming/pokemon-go-down-servers-ddos-attack-hackers-poodlecorp-game-unavailable-
a7140811.html which also targeted an API with lots of It traffic; the difference here is this
wasn't using DarkWeb bots this was using commercial cloud services to host the bots
causing the denial of service which made it harder to remedy.
As noted on the call for those members of the public who are concerned: One, the site did
not go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two, there has always been an
alternative easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file
comments if groups happen to find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. Three, we
have noticed some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual mechanism
(ECFS) to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially making it
difficult for individuals to file.
And as mentioned Thursday was our highest day of comments ever, more than 400,000 --
which shows when there aren't additional variables present the cloud based system can scale
to receive them all.
-d.
On May 15, 2017, at 12:14, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
I just accidentally cut myself off – David can patch me back in unless I cut you both off already.
418-0253
Talk soon
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
1210 works!
Should I call you or you call me? If you want to call me, I will be at (b) (6)
Let me know!
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:34 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Completely understand and I could do 1210pm-1230pm today if that works for Mark as
well? Or later this afternoon after 4:30pm?
Many thanks.
Sorry about that, I was on the road already when it looks like Mark called my office
phone Friday. Can we set something up for today or tomorrow?
-Frank
(I'll be at home office this morning at (b) (6) if you have any questions)
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:02 PM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
Frank Konkel here at Government Executive. Thought I'd reach out to see about
setting up a background chat with David to discuss the FCC's response to the DDoS
attacks earlier this week.
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to
release activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks,
and we've been reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and
perhaps some details can shed light on what really happened here and how you might
try to mitigate similar issues in the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
-Frank
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: Matthew Berry
To: Mark Wigfield; David Bray
Subject: Re: background for Comm Daily
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:44:48 PM
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:00 PM
To: Matthew Berry; David Bray
Subject: background for Comm Daily
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:20 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:19 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:17 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:28 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:09 AM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Brian Hart
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:00 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:53 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:46 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:35 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: (b) (5)
From: Billy Mitchell [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:12 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Cc: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: Request for comment/interview
Hi Mark,
It's been a few days since we last reached out to OMR, and I wanted to see if the dust has
settled some and I could get the FCC's side on the DDoS/comment filing incident over the
weekend.
I've worked with David Bray, CC'd before, and I'd love the chance to chat with him on the
phone on the record, or if that's not possible, as not for direct attribution. We'd really like to
get something solid from the FCC on it.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
From: Mark Wigfield
To: David Bray
Subject: RE: can you ask him if this is accurate? thanks.
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:49:35 PM
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 3:59 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: can you ask him if this is accurate? thanks.
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 3:56 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: can you ask him if this is accurate? thanks.
(b) (5)
From: Kirby, Paul [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 3:39 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: can you ask him if this is accurate? thanks.
The FCC this week delayed posting comments in the electronic comment filing
system (ECFS), while it modifies the posting schedule in the wake of a huge
number of comments in its open Internet proceeding, an FCC official told TR
Daily today.
Currently, comments filed to ECFS are posted on weekdays at 11 a.m. and 1, 3,
and 5 p.m. but not on weekends. Under the new process, comments can be
posted whenever leadership decides they should be, which could allow them to
posted by the FCC more frequently and reduce backlogs, the official said. The
plan is for comments to now be posted on weekends as well, the official said.
Coding is being tested both for the “on demand” function as well as to enable
comments filed in the open Internet proceeding in WC docket 17-08 via an
electronic inbox established for the docket (TR Daily, April 27) to be pulled into
ECFS. However, additional manual work on those submissions is necessary
before they can be posted so they would not be posted with the “on demand”
function, the official said.
The decision to delay posting comments filed in ECFS took effect the afternoon
of May 10, said the official, adding that some comments would be posted today
and all of them should be posted by the end of this weekend.
Earlier this week, FCC Chief Information Officer David Bray said that delays
experienced by parties attempting to file comments through ECFS were caused
by multiple distributed denial-of service attacks (DDoS), not by a large number
of parties trying to file comments (TR Daily May 8). That problem is not related
to the ECFS posting changes that are being made, a spokesman said.- Paul
Kirby, [email protected]
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: David Bray
To: Ed Vargas
Subject: Re: CIO Perspectives Virginia
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 5:17:39 PM
Attachments: image005.png
Many thanks Ed and it has been a rather full 48 hours. It continues however hopefully we have worked out
some solutions for now w/ our cloud partners to keep everything open for folks to comment as best as
possible.
How about we plan to chat in mid-June about other CIO events I can help speak on, especially on rapid
cloud adoption and motivating high performing teams to be self-starting creative problem solvers? I will
also ideally be at the CIO100 event if speakers are needed there?
-d.
Hi David –
I hope all is well… I was recently asked to jump in get back to you around your question below.
I spoke with Maryfran who said she was bringing in speakers that haven’t been on the agenda in past year or so –
hence why she hasn’t reached out to you for this year’s program.
However please do let us (on the Council side) of the business know if you will be attending, as it will be nice to
connect with you and discuss ways we can leverage each other support. Our role as an advisory services group is
to drive peer connections that become mutually beneficial in tackling challenges for all CIO’s involved. However I
see a bigger opportunity in leveraging Brand Management Team to promote you as possible speaker and panelists
at some of the national and global events we connect with though partner arrangements.
I saw the article below and realize you have your hands full right now, but let me know if we can meet at the event
in June or setup time for a call to discuss the benefits the CIO Executive Council can offer…
Thanks in advance
Ed V.
PS: as a CIO you did a nice job addressing the public attention to this…
FCC suffers DDoS attacks against public comments website
http://bit.ly/2qYBemI
Edwin Vargas
Director
CIO Executive Council from IDG
O +1.508.766.5420 | C +(b) (6) | CEC
<image005.png>
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, April 30, 2017 2:46 PM
To: Steve Ka <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: CIO Perspectives Virginia
From: David Bray
To: townery
Subject: RE: Citizen Request To Release FCC DDOS Log Files
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2017 12:31:00 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 4:18 PM
To: Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry
<[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
(b) (5)
From: Will Wiquist
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 3:59 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
(b) (5)
From: Daneman, Matthew [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 3:55 PM
To: Will Wiquist <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
Will
Hi. Just checking, does FCC have any comment?
Matt Daneman
Pay-TV and satellite reporter, Communications Daily
2115 Ward Court NW, Washington, DC 20037
Phone: 202-552-8204
Mobile: 301-676-5904
[email protected]
Twitter: @mdaneman
From: Daneman, Matthew
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 11:06 AM
To: 'Will Wiquist'
Subject: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
Will
‘Morning.
We’re working on an update on ECFS. For the fourth day in a row, looks like ECFS is non-/barely
functioning. Are you seeing the same? Are ECFS probs causing the FCC difficulty in doing its work, or
is it hearing complaints regarding? It seems every few weeks there’s an ECFS disruption – is the
agency having any discussions about making the system more robust in the future? What are the
causes of the current difficulties?
Matt Daneman
Pay-TV and satellite reporter, Communications Daily
2115 Ward Court NW, Washington, DC 20037
Phone: 202-552-8204
Mobile: 301-676-5904
[email protected]
Twitter: @mdaneman
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Will
Matt Daneman
Pay-TV and satellite reporter, Communications Daily
2115 Ward Court NW, Washington, DC 20037
Phone: 202-552-8204
Mobile: 301-676-5904
[email protected]
Twitter: @mdaneman
Will
‘Morning.
We’re working on an update on ECFS. For the fourth day in a row, looks like ECFS is non-/barely
functioning. Are you seeing the same? Are ECFS probs causing the FCC difficulty in doing its work, or
is it hearing complaints regarding? It seems every few weeks there’s an ECFS disruption – is the
agency having any discussions about making the system more robust in the future? What are the
causes of the current difficulties?
Matt Daneman
Pay-TV and satellite reporter, Communications Daily
2115 Ward Court NW, Washington, DC 20037
Phone: 202-552-8204
Mobile: 301-676-5904
[email protected]
Twitter: @mdaneman
From: Erik Scheibert
To: David Bray; Christine Calvosa; Mark Wigfield
Subject: Re: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2017 4:54:53 PM
(b) (5)
Begin forwarded message:
From: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Date: May 11, 2017 at 16:47:10 EDT
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>, David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Will Wiquist <[email protected]>, Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
(b)
(5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 4:47 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Cc: Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 4:46 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Cc: Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
On May 11, 2017, at 16:19, Matthew Berry <[email protected]> wrote:
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 4:18 PM
To: Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry
<[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
(b) (5)
From: Will Wiquist
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 3:59 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
(b) (5)
From: Daneman, Matthew [mailto [email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 3:55 PM
To: Will Wiquist <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
Will
Hi. Just checking, does FCC have any comment?
Matt Daneman
Pay-TV and satellite reporter,
Communications Daily <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-
3A__communicationsdaily.com_&d=DwMFAg&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=t-bgN3RZly0DRbszL-
q_UF6HGNR98ToiZ4QGXnF5MYI&m=DIhzndcU5YQ_yq9iHwCNGfKZQ29g6wuSdLh-9bj-
YzA&s=DCujgQaLGfgSjaTIDfFjR9TwzqDjoMOXDCOuHcxYF7o&e=>
2115 Ward Court NW, Washington, DC 20037
Phone: 202-552-8204
Mobile: 301-676-5904
[email protected]
Twitter:
@mdaneman <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-
3A__twitter.com_mdaneman&d=DwMFAg&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=t-bgN3RZly0DRbszL-
q_UF6HGNR98ToiZ4QGXnF5MYI&m=DIhzndcU5YQ_yq9iHwCNGfKZQ29g6wuSdLh-9bj-
YzA&s=nwzykOYirkdnIvJ9lP7GRgWGunR2fQPHzWMBykRe7nU&e=>
From: Daneman, Matthew
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 11:06 AM
To: 'Will Wiquist'
Subject: Comm Daily Q, ECFS woes
Will
‘Morning.
We’re working on an update on ECFS. For the fourth day in a row, looks like ECFS is non-/barely functioning.
Are you seeing the same? Are ECFS probs causing the FCC difficulty in doing its work, or is it hearing complaints
regarding? It
seems every few weeks there’s an ECFS disruption – is the agency having any discussions about making the
system more robust in the future? What are the causes of the current difficulties?
Matt Daneman
Pay-TV and satellite reporter,
Communications Daily <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-
3A__communicationsdaily.com_&d=DwMFAg&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=t-bgN3RZly0DRbszL-
q_UF6HGNR98ToiZ4QGXnF5MYI&m=DIhzndcU5YQ_yq9iHwCNGfKZQ29g6wuSdLh-9bj-
YzA&s=DCujgQaLGfgSjaTIDfFjR9TwzqDjoMOXDCOuHcxYF7o&e=>
2115 Ward Court NW, Washington, DC 20037
Phone: 202-552-8204
Mobile: 301-676-5904
[email protected]
Twitter:
@mdaneman <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-
3A__twitter.com_mdaneman&d=DwMFAg&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=t-bgN3RZly0DRbszL-
q_UF6HGNR98ToiZ4QGXnF5MYI&m=DIhzndcU5YQ_yq9iHwCNGfKZQ29g6wuSdLh-9bj-
YzA&s=nwzykOYirkdnIvJ9lP7GRgWGunR2fQPHzWMBykRe7nU&e=>
From: David Bray
To: Spencer Hersom
Subject: Re: Comment system server logs
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 8:44:35 AM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
One, the site did not go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two, there has
always been an alternative easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-
comments to file comments from should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high
traffic. Three, we have noticed some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual
mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially
making it difficult for individuals to file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-
are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-1494533379
Given the incredible public interest in the topic of net neutrality, the relatively wide spread
distrust, and the peculiar timing of the failures, it seems the only reasonable thing to do is to
release server logs for independent inspection. Please do what you can to make that a reality.
Spencer Hersom
Tehachapi, CA 93561
From: David Bray
To: pamela worth
Subject: Re: concerned citizen asking for info about your logs
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 9:29:17 PM
We try to help -- right now there is a lot of shouting going on and as mentioned there always
been an alternative easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to
file comments from should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. We have
noticed some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual mechanism (ECFS) to
file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially making it difficult for
individuals to file. Hope this helps.
On Wed, May 10, 2017 at 4:44 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Mr. Bray--I think the public, myself included, has a right to know about what really
happened with your alleged DDOS attacks this week, just as many thousands of people were
gearing up to comment publicly about net neutrality on the FCC's website. Please make your
logs public. (And for the love of the internet, please do what you can to preserve net
neutrality!)
Sincerely,
Pamela Worth
A taxpayer in Somerville, MA
From: [email protected]
To: pamela worth
Subject: Re: concerned citizen asking for info about your logs
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 4:44:07 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Mr. Bray--I think the public, myself included, has a right to know about what really happened
with your alleged DDOS attacks this week, just as many thousands of people were gearing up
to comment publicly about net neutrality on the FCC's website. Please make your logs public.
(And for the love of the internet, please do what you can to preserve net neutrality!)
Sincerely,
Pamela Worth
A taxpayer in Somerville, MA
From: Dan Paullus
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: Concerns Regarding the DDOS Attack Preventing Public Comment
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:42:18 AM
Dan
Dan Paullus
Art Director
Sixense Studios
+1 650 210 6017
Hello David,
My names Daniel Paullus, I'm a concerned citizen of the US. My issue is that the DDOS
attack that the FCC reported came at the most convenient possible time to accommodate
the well known agenda of the FCC's chairman Ajit Pai.
As of right now, there's no good avenue to procure records to prove this DDOS attack
happened, so I wanted to start by joining many other people in letting you know that this
doesn't look legitimate. The best way the FCC can maintain or restore public faith is to
release logs from the time frame in question.
Dan Paullus
Art Director
Sixense Studios
+1 650 210 6017
From: [email protected]
To: Dan Paullus
Subject: Re: Concerns Regarding the DDOS Attack Preventing Public Comment
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 8:38:32 PM
What you are asking is a Public Affairs issue. Also as noted there always was an advertised
alternative mechanism to file if ECFS was available. Hope this helps.
Dan Paullus
Art Director
Sixense Studios
+1 650 210 6017
There has always been an alternative mechanism easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/
internet-freedom-comments to file comments from should you find the ECFS site busy
responding to high traffic. Hope this helps.
Hello David,
My names Daniel Paullus, I'm a concerned citizen of the US. My issue is that the DDOS
attack that the FCC reported came at the most convenient possible time to accommodate the
well known agenda of the FCC's chairman Ajit Pai.
As of right now, there's no good avenue to procure records to prove this DDOS attack
happened, so I wanted to start by joining many other people in letting you know that this
doesn't look legitimate. The best way the FCC can maintain or restore public faith is to
release logs from the time frame in question.
Dan Paullus
Art Director
Sixense Studios
+1 650 210 6017
From: [email protected]
To: Dan Paullus
Subject: Re: Concerns Regarding the DDOS Attack Preventing Public Comment
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 7:39:58 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Hello David,
My names Daniel Paullus, I'm a concerned citizen of the US. My issue is that the DDOS
attack that the FCC reported came at the most convenient possible time to accommodate the
well known agenda of the FCC's chairman Ajit Pai.
As of right now, there's no good avenue to procure records to prove this DDOS attack
happened, so I wanted to start by joining many other people in letting you know that this
doesn't look legitimate. The best way the FCC can maintain or restore public faith is to release
logs from the time frame in question.
Dan Paullus
Art Director
Sixense Studios
+1 650 210 6017
From: David Bray
To: (b) (6)
Subject: Re: Ddos claim
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 2:17:45 PM
Thank you, I already filed an Express comment through the ECFS website.
My greater concern is the fact that the FCC is making a very serious claim regarding the
supposed ddos attack. I will forward my concerns to the office of media relations.
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
It is extremely troubling to imagine that the FCC would intentionally mislead the public
regarding a purported ddos attack. It is imperative that you release your logs to an
independent organization in order to verify the FCC's claims.
Please, do not do a disservice to the public you have been entrusted to serve.
Matthew Oberg,
High School teacher and Net Neutrality advocate.
From: Avi Bender (Fed)
To: David Bray; Monica Voigt (Fed); Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Cc: Gregory Capella (Fed); Clifton Brown (Fed)
Subject: RE: (b) (5)
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 7:51:45 AM
Yes- we will be flexible and will do our best to accommodate. Thank you.
Many thanks Monica and Avi -- would it be possible to start 30 minutes earlier from 1200-1pm
on 25 May, I have a meeting at 1pm that I can be a few minutes late for however ideally I'll
head to them around 1:15pm?
Truly appreciated,
-d.
Our team can do 12:30pm – 1:30pm on Thursday, May 25th at FCC downtown. Would this work for
you?
Thank you,
Monica
Monica Voigt
Management Analyst
Office of the Director
National Technical Information Service
Department of Commerce
Hi Avi,
Thank you for your understanding as we weathered a DDoS. How would a meeting the either
as a working lunch from 12-1pm at the FCC on Thurs 25 May or any time after 3pm?f you
want to meet in Clarendon we could do 4:30pm or later? The Commission meeting on the
attention-getting proceeding 17-108 is 18 May so that should give us enough space afterwards
for any additional activity -- again my apologies that Monday had us busy that morning.
-d.
Definitely we can reschedule and truly appreciate you understand this case of digital "snow"
today. I will send some possible dates soon.
Thank you,
-d.
Hi Avi,
My apologies -- can we reschedule?
There was a news show that last night directed massive amounts of attention and internet
traffic to the FCC. It would be better to meet during a less hectic time?
Many thanks,
-d.
I think I can make 12pm work for Avi’s schedule. I will send an invite out shortly.
Thank you,
Monica
Monica Voigt
Management Analyst
Office of the Director
National Technical Information Service
Department of Commerce
Many thanks Monica and Avi -- would it be possible to start 30 minutes earlier from 1200-1pm
on 25 May, I have a meeting at 1pm that I can be a few minutes late for however ideally I'll
head to them around 1:15pm?
Truly appreciated,
-d.
Our team can do 12:30pm – 1:30pm on Thursday, May 25th at FCC downtown. Would this work for
you?
Thank you,
Monica
Monica Voigt
Management Analyst
Office of the Director
National Technical Information Service
Department of Commerce
Hi Avi,
Thank you for your understanding as we weathered a DDoS. How would a meeting the either
as a working lunch from 12-1pm at the FCC on Thurs 25 May or any time after 3pm?f you
want to meet in Clarendon we could do 4:30pm or later? The Commission meeting on the
attention-getting proceeding 17-108 is 18 May so that should give us enough space afterwards
for any additional activity -- again my apologies that Monday had us busy that morning.
-d.
Thank you,
-d.
Hi Avi,
There was a news show that last night directed massive amounts of attention and internet
traffic to the FCC. It would be better to meet during a less hectic time?
Many thanks,
-d.
Thanks David and we look forward to rescheduling. The 25th should be OK and we can meet
wherever its convenient for you and your team. I think the lunch meeting would work at the FCC
and will ask Monica to look at our calendars to lock something in.
See you
Avi
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 9:01 AM
To: Avi Bender (Fed) <[email protected]>; Monica Voigt (Fed) <[email protected]>; Paul Weston
(Fed) <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Clifton Brown (Fed)
<[email protected]>; Gregory Capella (Fed) <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Discuss Potential Licensing Problem Statement - NTIS & FCC
Hi Avi,
Thank you for your understanding as we weathered a DDoS. How would a meeting the either
as a working lunch from 12-1pm at the FCC on Thurs 25 May or any time after 3pm?f you
want to meet in Clarendon we could do 4:30pm or later? The Commission meeting on the
attention-getting proceeding 17-108 is 18 May so that should give us enough space afterwards
for any additional activity -- again my apologies that Monday had us busy that morning.
-d.
Many thanks and my apologies. While we have initially stabilized the surge to our comment
filing system (...alas we cannot block those intentionally sending high traffic else it would. E
easier...), it would be best to meet when we can provide our full attention and Team's thoughts
to this.
Definitely we can reschedule and truly appreciate you understand this case of digital "snow"
today. I will send some possible dates soon.
Thank you,
-d.
Hi Avi,
There was a news show that last night directed massive amounts of attention and internet
traffic to the FCC. It would be better to meet during a less hectic time?
Many thanks,
-d.
Hi Avi,
Thank you for your understanding as we weathered a DDoS. How would a meeting the either
as a working lunch from 12-1pm at the FCC on Thurs 25 May or any time after 3pm?f you
want to meet in Clarendon we could do 4:30pm or later? The Commission meeting on the
attention-getting proceeding 17-108 is 18 May so that should give us enough space afterwards
for any additional activity -- again my apologies that Monday had us busy that morning.
-d.
Many thanks and my apologies. While we have initially stabilized the surge to our comment
filing system (...alas we cannot block those intentionally sending high traffic else it would. E
easier...), it would be best to meet when we can provide our full attention and Team's thoughts
to this.
Definitely we can reschedule and truly appreciate you understand this case of digital "snow"
today. I will send some possible dates soon.
Thank you,
-d.
I just called the Van and told them to turn around - they are coming from Springfield- we will
reschedule
There was a news show that last night directed massive amounts of attention and internet
traffic to the FCC. It would be better to meet during a less hectic time?
Many thanks,
-d.
Many thanks and my apologies. While we have initially stabilized the surge to our comment
filing system (...alas we cannot block those intentionally sending high traffic else it would. E
easier...), it would be best to meet when we can provide our full attention and Team's thoughts
to this.
Definitely we can reschedule and truly appreciate you understand this case of digital "snow"
today. I will send some possible dates soon.
Thank you,
-d.
I just called the Van and told them to turn around - they are coming from Springfield- we will
reschedule
There was a news show that last night directed massive amounts of attention and internet
traffic to the FCC. It would be better to meet during a less hectic time?
Many thanks,
-d.
(b) (5)
Rich M
Richard L. Mansfield
Associate CIO for Stakeholder Relations
Information Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Room: 1-C220
Office: 202-418-2021
Intrapreneur Directory
*** Non-Public: For Internal Use Only ***
From: John Skudlarek
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:40 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
<[email protected]>; Mark Savi <[email protected]>; Richard Mansfield
<[email protected]>
Cc: Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: Draft Sunshine Meeting Response to Matthew Berry
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
John P. Skudlarek
Deputy Chief Information Officer
Federal Communications Commission
445 Twelfth Street SW.
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-0859
@JohnSkudlarek
To: David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Andrew Nebus (CTR); Mark Savi; Tony Summerlin ([email protected])
Subject: Draft Sunshine Meeting Response to Matthew Berry
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33:05 PM
(b) (5)
John P. Skudlarek
Deputy Chief Information Officer
Federal Communications Commission
445 Twelfth Street SW.
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-0859
@JohnSkudlarek
From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, May 19, 2017 4:31 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: David Bray
Subject: Re: ECFS
Yes. It was released yesterday afternoon and has been updated everywhere.
It did seem to be working yesterday afternoon. A couple of us noticed it. Does that mean it's
fixed going forward?
On May 19, 2017, at 9:26 AM, Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]> wrote:
The update for Firefox was pushed to production last night, and I have confirmed that
that result counts and pagination work properly for me. Can you have a look in
Firefox?
I understand. When you say not that stable, are there reproducible issues I can
have the team look into when using Internet Explorer, or more along the lines of
usability feedback (also welcome, but prioritized differently of course)?
Once I have confirmed this is pushed to production and I can verify the fix, I’ll let
you know.
Andrew
I have not yet been able to use consistently Firefox to access ECFS.
Which is not that stable, either, for that application, but it does have
more functionality.
Would you be able to please let me know once the Firefox functionality
is fully restored?
Jonathan
Jonathan,
Big thanks again for reporting and detailing the issue so well with
Firefox. The team is testing a fix for this that should deploy later this
week.
Beyond the numbering and pagination issues (and the missing RSS
feed) on Firefox, I wanted to follow up if you had identified any
other issues.
Andrew
Thank you.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>; Andrew
Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs
and are trying to identify a fix. Other browsers should
work fine.
Same with IE. On our end and with several others it has
been working too. The challenge with IT for websites is
isolating whether it’s the system that is delivering the
information or the browser (on the user’s end) that is
showing it or some combination. If other folks had the
same plug-in or browser version that could have been an
issue.
Best regards,
-d.
Thanks again.
Thanks, David.
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox. Not
just the page number issue, which began last week, but
many if not most filings from any time period do not display
using Firefox. Right now, I am pleased to say, I can see all
filings made before Thursday on IE. That was not
happening earlier this week, but it is now.
Cheers.
Hi Jonathan,
-d.
Hi David.
ECFS later today will post all filings made today and
yesterday, none of which have been posted yet.
Thanks.
Jonathan
202-552-8200
From: Make, Jonathan
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: ECFS
Date: Saturday, May 20, 2017 9:58:06 AM
sure. thanks.
Hi Jonathan,
Similarly, the issue you experienced with Internet Explorer was with that plugin
you mentioned and not ECFS.
Right now we are not getting any calls or emails (in the future we do continue to
ask for screenshots and URLs as they really do help us rapidly diagnosis) about
issues w/ ECFS.
-d.
Great news.
So we're now entirely past any ECFS problems of any type, as far as you know?
Yes. It was released yesterday afternoon and has been updated everywhere.
The update for Firefox was pushed to production last night, and I have
confirmed that that result counts and pagination work properly for me.
Can you have a look in Firefox?
I understand. When you say not that stable, are there reproducible
issues I can have the team look into when using Internet Explorer, or
more along the lines of usability feedback (also welcome, but
prioritized differently of course)?
Andrew
Jonathan
Jonathan,
Andrew
Thank you.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-
news.com>; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Best regards,
-d.
Thanks again.
Thanks, David.
Cheers.
Hi Jonathan,
-d.
Hi David.
Thanks.
Jonathan
202-552-8200
From: Make, Jonathan
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: David Bray
Subject: Re: ECFS
Date: Friday, May 19, 2017 4:24:26 PM
It did seem to be working yesterday afternoon. A couple of us noticed it. Does that mean it's
fixed going forward?
On May 19, 2017, at 9:26 AM, Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]> wrote:
The update for Firefox was pushed to production last night, and I have confirmed that
that result counts and pagination work properly for me. Can you have a look in
Firefox?
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 4:33 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>
Cc: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: ECFS
I understand. When you say not that stable, are there reproducible issues I can
have the team look into when using Internet Explorer, or more along the lines of
usability feedback (also welcome, but prioritized differently of course)?
Once I have confirmed this is pushed to production and I can verify the fix, I’ll let
you know.
Andrew
On May 16, 2017, at 4:24 PM, Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-
news.com> wrote:
Hi Andrew and David.
I think that is it.
I have not yet been able to use consistently Firefox to access ECFS.
So I have been using Internet Explorer.
Which is not that stable, either, for that application, but it does have more
functionality.
Would you be able to please let me know once the Firefox functionality is
fully restored?
Thanks for all you do.
Jonathan
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR) [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 3:37 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Subject: Re: ECFS
Jonathan,
Big thanks again for reporting and detailing the issue so well with
Firefox. The team is testing a fix for this that should deploy later this
week.
Beyond the numbering and pagination issues (and the missing RSS
feed) on Firefox, I wanted to follow up if you had identified any other
issues.
Andrew
On May 12, 2017, at 1:39 PM, David Bray
<[email protected]> wrote:
Many thanks. Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send
any screenshots + URL of other issues you’re having or if the
issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox.
Thank you.
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Make, Jonathan
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this. My last status update on this was that
we had a fix for the numbering issue in the works that had to
be tested. I will check if it made its way to production.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>; Andrew
Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a
screenshot + the URL you are trying to access and send to
Andrew – you can cc me.
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you.
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs
and are trying to identify a fix. Other browsers should
work fine.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Do you want me to take some screenshots now?
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future
please send us URLs and screenshots.
Same with IE. On our end and with several others it has been
working too. The challenge with IT for websites is isolating
whether it’s the system that is delivering the information or
the browser (on the user’s end) that is showing it or some
combination. If other folks had the same plug-in or browser
version that could have been an issue.
If your browser was cached that could have also been an
issue. Lots of different variables.
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and
URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the Team “sleuth”
what’s going on either at the server end or the web browser
end.
Best regards,
-d.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again.
Just based on what others have said outside this
organization, I don’t think this is limited to only my
computer.
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time.
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and
yesterday which have not yet been posted at all). But IE
before today I do not think was showing them, either.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a
plug-in or antivirus too that’s causing the issue as we’re
simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven’t had an
issue nor have other folks.
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local
machines. Andrew Nebus copied here, and again off the
record as we’re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can
work with you if it arises. In the future if you send Andrew
URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them
ourselves and see if we see the same result.
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings
made before Thursday on IE, did you try IE on Tuesday as
well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David.
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later
today, for that part, and to ensure we’re all on the same
page.
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox. Not
just the page number issue, which began last week, but
many if not most filings from any time period do not display
using Firefox. Right now, I am pleased to say, I can see all
filings made before Thursday on IE. That was not happening
earlier this week, but it is now.
Cheers.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help,
not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on
Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working at all, or it's
not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a
search aren't working) however that it does work in IE
and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of
Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other
browsers should work fine.
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not
happened for yesterday and today. We have turned it off
until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk
filing mechanism this weekend, that way they're all there
at the same time together.
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that
was unofficially the highest day ever for comments
received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for
details). Monday you already know what that was.
Tuesday was fine. Off the record, Wednesday afternoon
there was an issue where some entities were using the
RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the search
function of ECFS with massive queries that was address
that evening.
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d.
One issue is I often have to wait a bit before I can execute certain commands in ECFS in IE.
Like, moving from the 25 filings/screen to another page view.
https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2017/05/18/2017-09885/promoting-technological-
solutions-to-combat-contraband-wireless-device-use-in-correctional
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 9:08 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: David Bray
Subject: Re: ECFS
Sure.
For the first time since two Sundays ago,
this afternoon, it worked OK in IE.
On May 16, 2017, at 4:37 PM, Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>
wrote:
Not sure on IE. Quite possibly. It apparently is an issue that IE has generally with ECFS.
It takes a lot of time to do any particular function. And it crashes often. I could probably
send specific issues as they occur.
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR) [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 4:29 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: David Bray
Subject: Re: ECFS
I understand. When you say not that stable, are there reproducible issues I can
have the team look into when using Internet Explorer, or more along the lines of
usability feedback (also welcome, but prioritized differently of course)?
Once I have confirmed this is pushed to production and I can verify the fix, I’ll let
you know.
Andrew
Jonathan,
Big thanks again for reporting and detailing the issue so well with
Firefox. The team is testing a fix for this that should deploy later this
week.
Beyond the numbering and pagination issues (and the missing RSS
feed) on Firefox, I wanted to follow up if you had identified any other
issues.
Andrew
I am looking into this. My last status update on this was that
we had a fix for the numbering issue in the works that had to
be tested. I will check if it made its way to production.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>; Andrew
Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again.
Just based on what others have said outside this
organization, I don’t think this is limited to only my
computer.
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time.
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and
yesterday which have not yet been posted at all). But IE
before today I do not think was showing them, either.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help,
not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on
Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working at all, or it's
not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a
search aren't working) however that it does work in IE
and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of
Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other
browsers should work fine.
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not
happened for yesterday and today. We have turned it off
until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk
filing mechanism this weekend, that way they're all there
at the same time together.
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that
was unofficially the highest day ever for comments
received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for
details). Monday you already know what that was.
Tuesday was fine. Off the record, Wednesday afternoon
there was an issue where some entities were using the
RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the search
function of ECFS with massive queries that was address
that evening.
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:40 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-
news.com>
Cc: Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Many thanks. Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other issues
you’re having or if the issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox.
Thank you.
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this. My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in
the works that had to be tested. I will check if it made its way to production.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access
and send to Andrew – you can cc me.
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you.
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other
browsers should work fine.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Do you want me to take some screenshots now?
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots.
Same with IE. On our end and with several others it has been working too. The challenge with IT for
websites is isolating whether it’s the system that is delivering the information or the browser (on
the user’s end) that is showing it or some combination. If other folks had the same plug-in or
browser version that could have been an issue.
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue. Lots of different variables.
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at
the Team “sleuth” what’s going on either at the server end or the web browser end.
Best regards,
-d.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again.
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don’t think this is limited to only my
computer.
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time.
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and yesterday which have not yet been
posted at all). But IE before today I do not think was showing them, either.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that’s causing
the issue as we’re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven’t had an issue nor have other
folks.
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines. Andrew Nebus copied here, and
again off the record as we’re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with you if it arises.
In the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves
and see if we see the same result.
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you
try IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David.
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we’re
all on the same page.
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox. Not just the page number issue, which began
last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox. Right now,
I am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE. That was not happening earlier
this week, but it is now.
Cheers.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not
working at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't
working) however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of
Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other browsers should work fine.
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today. We
have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism this
weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together.
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for
comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details). Monday you already
know what that was. Tuesday was fine. Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an
issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the search
function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening.
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d.
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:51 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b)
(5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:47 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:14 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b)
(5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:12 PM
To: Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:40 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>
Cc: Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Many thanks Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other issues you re having or if the issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox
Thank you
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in the works that had to be tested I will check if it made its way to production
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access and send to Andrew – you can cc me
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should work fine
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Do you want me to take some screenshots now?
From: David Bray [mailto:David Bray@fcc gov]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots
Same with IE On our end and with several others it has been working too The challenge with IT for websites is isolating whether it s the system that is delivering the information or the browser
(on the user s end) that is showing it or some combination If other folks had the same plug-in or browser version that could have been an issue
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue Lots of different variables
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the Team “sleuth” what s going on either at the server end or the web browser end
Best regards,
-d
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:02 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don t think this is limited to only my computer
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and yesterday which have not yet been posted at all) But IE before today I do not think was showing them, either
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that s causing the issue as we re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven t had an issue nor have other
folks
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines Andrew Nebus copied here, and again off the record as we re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with you if it arises
In the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves and see if we see the same result
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you try IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we re all on the same page
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox Not just the page number issue, which began last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox Right
now, I am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE That was not happening earlier this week, but it is now
Cheers
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't working)
however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should work fine
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today We have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism
this weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details) Monday you
already know what that was Tuesday was fine Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the
search function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
-------- Original Message --------
From: Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Date: Fri, May 12, 2017, 19:36
To: "Andrew Nebus (CTR)" <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>,"Tony Summerlin (CTR)" <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>
CC: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>,John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
-------- Original Message --------
From: "Andrew Nebus (CTR)" <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Date: Fri, May 12, 2017, 19:35
To: "Tony Summerlin (CTR)" <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>
CC: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>,Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>,John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b)
(5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:51 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:47 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:14 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b)
(5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:12 PM
To: Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:40 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>
Cc: Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Many thanks Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other issues you re having or if the issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox
Thank you
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in the works that had to be tested I will check if it made its way to production
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access and send to Andrew – you can cc me
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should work fine
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Do you want me to take some screenshots now?
From: David Bray [mailto:David Bray@fcc gov]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots
Same with IE On our end and with several others it has been working too The challenge with IT for websites is isolating whether it s the system that is delivering the information or the browser
(on the user s end) that is showing it or some combination If other folks had the same plug-in or browser version that could have been an issue
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue Lots of different variables
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the Team “sleuth” what s going on either at the server end or the web browser end
Best regards,
-d
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:02 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don t think this is limited to only my computer
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and yesterday which have not yet been posted at all) But IE before today I do not think was showing them, either
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that s causing the issue as we re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven t had an issue nor have other
folks
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines Andrew Nebus copied here, and again off the record as we re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with you if it arises
In the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves and see if we see the same result
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you try IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we re all on the same page
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox Not just the page number issue, which began last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox Right
now, I am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE That was not happening earlier this week, but it is now
Cheers
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't working)
however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should work fine
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today We have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism
this weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details) Monday you
already know what that was Tuesday was fine Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the
search function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
-------- Original Message --------
From: "Andrew Nebus (CTR)" <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Date: Fri, May 12, 2017, 19:35
To: "Tony Summerlin (CTR)" <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>
CC: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>,Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>,John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4 51 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b)
(5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:47 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:14 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:12 PM
To: Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:40 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>
Cc: Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Many thanks Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other issues you re having or if the issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox
Thank you
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in the works that had to be tested I will check if it made its way to production
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access and send to Andrew – you can cc me
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should work fine
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Do you want me to take some screenshots now?
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1 08 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots
Same with IE On our end and with several others it has been working too The challenge with IT for websites is isolating whether it s the system that is delivering the information or the browser
(on the user s end) that is showing it or some combination If other folks had the same plug-in or browser version that could have been an issue
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue Lots of different variables
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the Team “sleuth” what s going on either at the server end or the web browser end
Best regards,
-d
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1 02 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don t think this is limited to only my computer
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and yesterday which have not yet been posted at all) But IE before today I do not think was showing them, either
From: David Bray [mailto:David Bray@fcc gov]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that s causing the issue as we re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven t had an issue nor have other
folks
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines Andrew Nebus copied here, and again off the record as we re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with you if it arises
In the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves and see if we see the same result
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you try IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we re all on the same page
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox Not just the page number issue, which began last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox Right
now, I am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE That was not happening earlier this week, but it is now
Cheers
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't working)
however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should work fine
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today We have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism
this weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details) Monday you
already know what that was Tuesday was fine Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the
search function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4 51 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:47 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:14 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:12 PM
To: Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:40 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>
Cc: Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Many thanks Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other issues you re having or if the issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox
Thank you
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in the works that had to be tested I will check if it made its way to production
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access and send to Andrew – you can cc me
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should work fine
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Do you want me to take some screenshots now?
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots
Same with IE On our end and with several others it has been working too The challenge with IT for websites is isolating whether it s the system that is delivering the information or the browser
(on the user s end) that is showing it or some combination If other folks had the same plug-in or browser version that could have been an issue
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue Lots of different variables
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the Team “sleuth” what s going on either at the server end or the web browser end
Best regards,
-d
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1 02 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don t think this is limited to only my computer
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and yesterday which have not yet been posted at all) But IE before today I do not think was showing them, either
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that s causing the issue as we re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven t had an issue nor have other
folks
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines Andrew Nebus copied here, and again off the record as we re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with you if it arises
In the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves and see if we see the same result
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you try IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we re all on the same page
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox Not just the page number issue, which began last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox Right
now, I am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE That was not happening earlier this week, but it is now
Cheers
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't working)
however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should work fine
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today We have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism
this weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details) Monday you
already know what that was Tuesday was fine Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the
search function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d
Thank you, I ll make sure the team reviews these details
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 5 03 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
We can confirm it is happening with the latest versions of Firefox Older versions of Firefox don t show it Internet Explorer also shows fine
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4 53 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Cc: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: ECFS
Mozilla says they are looking into it, too They said they have not yet had any reports except for mine
On May 12, 2017, at 1:25 PM, Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov> wrote:
I am looking into this My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in the works that had to be tested I will check if it made its way to production
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access and send to Andrew – you can cc me
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should work fine
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots
Same with IE On our end and with several others it has been working too The challenge with IT for websites is isolating whether it s the system that is delivering the information or
the browser (on the user s end) that is showing it or some combination If other folks had the same plug-in or browser version that could have been an issue
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue Lots of different variables
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the Team “sleuth” what s going on either at the server end or the web browser end
Best regards,
-d
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1 02 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don t think this is limited to only my computer
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and yesterday which have not yet been posted at all) But IE before today I do not think was showing them, either
From: David Bray [mailto:David Bray@fcc gov]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that s causing the issue as we re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven t had an issue
nor have other folks
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines Andrew Nebus copied here, and again off the record as we re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with
you if it arises In the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves and see if we see the same result
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you try IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we re all on the same page
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox Not just the page number issue, which began last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using
Firefox Right now, I am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE That was not happening earlier this week, but it is now
Cheers
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search
aren't working) however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should
work fine
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today We have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing
mechanism this weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details)
Monday you already know what that was Tuesday was fine Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to
create excessive loads on the search function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d
(b)
(5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 5 03 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b)
(5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4 51 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b)
(5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:47 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:14 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b)
(5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:12 PM
To: Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>; David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:10:40 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR); David Bray; Christine Calvosa
Cc: John Skudlarek
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b)
(5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4 09 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Cc: John Skudlarek <John Skudlarek@fcc gov>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <Tony Summerlin@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:40 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>
Cc: Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Many thanks Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other issues you re having or if the issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox
Thank you
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in the works that had to be tested I will check if it made its way to production
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access and send to Andrew – you can cc me
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should work fine
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots
Same with IE On our end and with several others it has been working too The challenge with IT for websites is isolating whether it s the system that is delivering the information or the browser
(on the user s end) that is showing it or some combination If other folks had the same plug-in or browser version that could have been an issue
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue Lots of different variables
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the Team “sleuth” what s going on either at the server end or the web browser end
Best regards,
-d
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1 02 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <Andrew Nebus ctr@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don t think this is limited to only my computer
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and yesterday which have not yet been posted at all) But IE before today I do not think was showing them, either
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that s causing the issue as we re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven t had an issue nor have other
folks
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines Andrew Nebus copied here, and again off the record as we re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with you if it arises
In the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves and see if we see the same result
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you try IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto jmake@warren-news com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>; Christine Calvosa <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we re all on the same page
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox Not just the page number issue, which began last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox Right
now, I am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE That was not happening earlier this week, but it is now
Cheers
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't working)
however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix Other browsers should work fine
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today We have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism
this weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details) Monday you
already know what that was Tuesday was fine Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the
search function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d
From: Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-news com>
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:41:21 AM
To: David Bray
Subject: ECFS
Hi David
Here is my understanding of where things stand with ECFS, from talking with a programmer and an ECFS help desk person today and from talking to others in our newsroom and among the
communications bar all this week Would you mind letting me know if I am missing anything or if the ECFS folks do not know any of this, so I can communicate it to them? I am also trying to
communicate this to the FCC PR people, so that everyone is on the same page there I am just relating this to you as a courtesy
ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox, so it s recommended that folks use a different browser
ECFS later today will post all filings made today and yesterday, none of which have been posted yet
ECFS has experienced various periods of down time this week This is due to receiving a high volume of filings this week For all day so far today, ECFS has been fully up The issues we & others
have encountered with ECFS this week (in multiple browsers, not just in Firefox) are related to ECFS being overwhelmed with comments None of this is related to the previous and recent DDoS
attacks
Thanks
Jonathan
202-552-8200
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:07 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR); Christine Calvosa
Cc: John Skudlarek; Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Subject: FW: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:40 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-
news.com>
Cc: Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Many thanks. Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other issues
you’re having or if the issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox.
Thank you.
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this. My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in
the works that had to be tested. I will check if it made its way to production.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access
and send to Andrew – you can cc me.
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you.
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other
browsers should work fine.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots.
Same with IE. On our end and with several others it has been working too. The challenge with IT for
websites is isolating whether it’s the system that is delivering the information or the browser (on the
user’s end) that is showing it or some combination. If other folks had the same plug-in or browser
version that could have been an issue.
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue. Lots of different variables.
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the
Team “sleuth” what’s going on either at the server end or the web browser end.
Best regards,
-d.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again.
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don’t think this is limited to only my
computer.
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time.
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and yesterday which have not yet been
posted at all). But IE before today I do not think was showing them, either.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that’s causing the
issue as we’re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven’t had an issue nor have other folks.
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines. Andrew Nebus copied here, and
again off the record as we’re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with you if it arises. In
the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves
and see if we see the same result.
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you try
IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David.
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we’re all
on the same page.
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox. Not just the page number issue, which began
last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox. Right now, I
am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE. That was not happening earlier
this week, but it is now.
Cheers.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working
at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't working)
however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have
bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other browsers should work fine.
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today. We
have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism this
weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together.
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for
comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details). Monday you already
know what that was. Tuesday was fine. Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an
issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the search
function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening.
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d.
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:12 PM
To: Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
<[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:11 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:09 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:40 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-
news.com>
Cc: Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Many thanks. Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other issues
you’re having or if the issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox.
Thank you.
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this. My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in
the works that had to be tested. I will check if it made its way to production.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access
and send to Andrew – you can cc me.
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you.
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other
browsers should work fine.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots.
Same with IE. On our end and with several others it has been working too. The challenge with IT for
websites is isolating whether it’s the system that is delivering the information or the browser (on the
user’s end) that is showing it or some combination. If other folks had the same plug-in or browser
version that could have been an issue.
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue. Lots of different variables.
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the
Team “sleuth” what’s going on either at the server end or the web browser end.
Best regards,
-d.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again.
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don’t think this is limited to only my
computer.
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time.
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and yesterday which have not yet been
posted at all). But IE before today I do not think was showing them, either.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that’s causing the
issue as we’re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven’t had an issue nor have other folks.
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines. Andrew Nebus copied here, and
again off the record as we’re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with you if it arises. In
the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves
and see if we see the same result.
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you try
IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David.
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we’re all
on the same page.
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox. Not just the page number issue, which began
last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox. Right now, I
am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE. That was not happening earlier
this week, but it is now.
Cheers.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working
at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't working)
however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have
bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other browsers should work fine.
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today. We
have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism this
weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together.
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for
comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details). Monday you already
know what that was. Tuesday was fine. Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an
issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the search
function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening.
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d.
(b) (5)
From: Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:11 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
(b) (5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:09 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:40 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-
news.com>
Cc: Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Many thanks. Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other issues
you’re having or if the issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox.
Thank you.
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this. My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in
the works that had to be tested. I will check if it made its way to production.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access
and send to Andrew – you can cc me.
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you.
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other
browsers should work fine.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots.
Same with IE. On our end and with several others it has been working too. The challenge with IT for
websites is isolating whether it’s the system that is delivering the information or the browser (on the
user’s end) that is showing it or some combination. If other folks had the same plug-in or browser
version that could have been an issue.
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue. Lots of different variables.
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the
Team “sleuth” what’s going on either at the server end or the web browser end.
Best regards,
-d.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again.
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don’t think this is limited to only my
computer.
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time.
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and yesterday which have not yet been
posted at all). But IE before today I do not think was showing them, either.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that’s causing the
issue as we’re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven’t had an issue nor have other folks.
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines. Andrew Nebus copied here, and
again off the record as we’re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with you if it arises. In
the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves
and see if we see the same result.
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you try
IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David.
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we’re all
on the same page.
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox. Not just the page number issue, which began
last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox. Right now, I
am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE. That was not happening earlier
this week, but it is now.
Cheers.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working
at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't working)
however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have
bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other browsers should work fine.
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today. We
have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism this
weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together.
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for
comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details). Monday you already
know what that was. Tuesday was fine. Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an
issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the search
function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening.
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d.
(b) (5)
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:09 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: ECFS
(b) (5)
(
b
)
(
5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:40 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>; Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-
news.com>
Cc: Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Many thanks. Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other issues
you’re having or if the issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox.
Thank you.
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this. My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in
the works that had to be tested. I will check if it made its way to production.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access
and send to Andrew – you can cc me.
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank you.
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other
browsers should work fine.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots.
Same with IE. On our end and with several others it has been working too. The challenge with IT for
websites is isolating whether it’s the system that is delivering the information or the browser (on the
user’s end) that is showing it or some combination. If other folks had the same plug-in or browser
version that could have been an issue.
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue. Lots of different variables.
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the
Team “sleuth” what’s going on either at the server end or the web browser end.
Best regards,
-d.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again.
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don’t think this is limited to only my
computer.
Firefox will not show most filings made at any time.
IE as of today is showing them (except obviously today and yesterday which have not yet been
posted at all). But IE before today I do not think was showing them, either.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that’s causing the
issue as we’re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven’t had an issue nor have other folks.
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines. Andrew Nebus copied here, and
again off the record as we’re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with you if it arises. In
the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves
and see if we see the same result.
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you try
IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David.
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we’re all
on the same page.
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox. Not just the page number issue, which began
last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox. Right now, I
am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE. That was not happening earlier
this week, but it is now.
Cheers.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working
at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't working)
however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have
bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other browsers should work fine.
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today. We
have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism this
weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together.
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for
comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details). Monday you already
know what that was. Tuesday was fine. Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an
issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the search
function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening.
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d.
(b) (5)
Many thanks. Beyond the numbering issue, Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other issues
you’re having or if the issues are happening on a browser other than Firefox.
Thank you.
I am looking into this. My last status update on this was that we had a fix for the numbering issue in
the works that had to be tested. I will check if it made its way to production.
If it is still not working for you, yes and please send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to access
and send to Andrew – you can cc me.
We are aware that some versions of Firefox have bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other
browsers should work fine.
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in the future please send us URLs and screenshots.
Same with IE. On our end and with several others it has been working too. The challenge with IT for
websites is isolating whether it’s the system that is delivering the information or the browser (on the
user’s end) that is showing it or some combination. If other folks had the same plug-in or browser
version that could have been an issue.
If your browser was cached that could have also been an issue. Lots of different variables.
We strive to help as much as possible, so screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied here) at the
Team “sleuth” what’s going on either at the server end or the web browser end.
Best regards,
-d.
Thanks again.
Just based on what others have said outside this organization, I don’t think this is limited to only my
computer.
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if you have a plug-in or antivirus too that’s causing the
issue as we’re simply not seeing it here – I use Firefox and haven’t had an issue nor have other folks.
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on local machines. Andrew Nebus copied here, and
again off the record as we’re trying to provide IT assistance can help, can work with you if it arises. In
the future if you send Andrew URLs that you think are not working, we can trying them ourselves
and see if we see the same result.
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did you try
IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Thanks, David.
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we’re all
on the same page.
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox. Not just the page number issue, which began
last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox. Right now, I
am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE. That was not happening earlier
this week, but it is now.
Cheers.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working
at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't working)
however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have
bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other browsers should work fine.
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today. We
have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism this
weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together.
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for
comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details). Monday you already
know what that was. Tuesday was fine. Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an
issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the search
function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening.
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d.
Hi David.
Here is my understanding of where things stand with ECFS, from talking with a programmer and an
ECFS help desk person today and from talking to others in our newsroom and among the
communications bar all this week. Would you mind letting me know if I am missing anything or if the
ECFS folks do not know any of this, so I can communicate it to them? I am also trying to
communicate this to the FCC PR people, so that everyone is on the same page there. I am just
relating this to you as a courtesy.
ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox, so it’s recommended that folks use a different browser.
ECFS later today will post all filings made today and yesterday, none of which have been posted yet.
ECFS has experienced various periods of down time this week. This is due to receiving a high volume
of filings this week. For all day so far today, ECFS has been fully up. The issues we & others have
encountered with ECFS this week (in multiple browsers, not just in Firefox) are related to ECFS being
overwhelmed with comments. None of this is related to the previous and recent DDoS attacks.
Thanks.
Jonathan
202-552-8200
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David.
I believe I am going to speak with someone @ OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure we’re all
on the same page.
ECFS all this week has been barely working on Firefox. Not just the page number issue, which began
last week, but many if not most filings from any time period do not display using Firefox. Right now, I
am pleased to say, I can see all filings made before Thursday on IE. That was not happening earlier
this week, but it is now.
Cheers.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not working
at all, or it's not working fully (as in the numbers at the top of a search aren't working)
however that it does work in IE and Chrome? We are aware that some versions of Firefox have
bugs and are trying to identify a fix. Other browsers should work fine.
You are correct that the auto-dissemination has not happened for yesterday and today. We
have turned it off until we can also bring in the filings done via the bulk filing mechanism this
weekend, that way they're all there at the same time together.
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues and that was unofficially the highest day ever for
comments received by the FCC ever (you'd have to ask OMR for details). Monday you already
know what that was. Tuesday was fine. Off the record, Wednesday afternoon there was an
issue where some entities were using the RSS feeds to create excessive loads on the search
function of ECFS with massive queries that was address that evening.
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d.
Noticed we’ve been maxing out on the 30 req/min rate limit and getting 429 Too Many
Requests responses for the past ~20mins now, can this please be raised?
Thanks,
Mike
Hi Mike,
Sorry for the slow reply.
The “Proceeding” part of the submission remains the same, so you are correct in that
you should be able to skip that query.
I checked and your test submission went through normally:
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/filing/1050310253630
Thanks,
Steve
From: Mike Morris [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, May 03, 2017 12:13 AM
To: Stephen Vong (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>; James Brown
<[email protected]>; Ali Toor (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: ECFS API Errors and Rate Limit increase
I removed an initial lookup of the ECFS proceeding that we were doing before
each comment submission, so we’re now submitting ECFS comments with only
the “name” docket identifier and not a “description”, which yields confirmation
emails like the following:
Confirmation Number: 20170503652204734
Proceeding(s): 17-108 : undefined
Whereas previously I was seeing:
Confirmation Number: 20170503727206692
Proceeding(s): 17-108 : Restoring Internet Freedom
Can you confirm that these are being processed correctly on your end? If this is an
issue I can look into caching the proceeding lookup to save on API calls instead
of skipping it entirely.
Thanks,
Mike
On May 2, 2017, at 1:42 PM, Stephen Vong (CTR)
<[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Mike,
Thank you for the heads-up.
We do expect a rush of submissions, and are working hard to ensure that
everyone will be able to file their comments.
The error you saw yesterday was likely due to a server issue that we
encountered in the late afternoon/evening. That has been addressed, so
the system should be available normally again.
We very much appreciate your help in mitigating the anticipated traffic
congestion. Certainly, one big change that could help with performance
would be to limit the use of file attachments. Background processing of
the file attachments is one of the biggest performance bottlenecks of the
system, and so if you can instead use the text area of the Express
comments to make your filings (and that text area can accommodate
many pages’ worth of text), then the application will be able to handle
more entries.
In return, we could more comfortably raise your submission rate limits.
As mentioned before, we’ve set the general limits to 500 submissions/hr
per user. I have just raised the limits on your account to 30
submissions/minute, which equates to 1800/hour. We will continue to
monitor the system, and will raise that limit if we see that the servers can
handle it.
Thank you,
Steve
From: Mike Morris [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 02, 2017 10:40 AM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>; Stephen Vong
(CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: James Brown <[email protected]>
Subject: ECFS API Errors and Rate Limit increase
ClusterBlockException[blocked by:
[SERVICE_UNAVAILABLE/1/state not recovered / initialized];]
Saw a burst of new errors (^ above) yesterday from the ECFS API,
wanted to make sure you were aware of them, and also give y’all a
heads up that we’re anticipating sending a very high volume of traffic
later this week, likely starting on Thursday evening. It sounds like
there were some stability issues the last time there was a surge of
comments
(http://www.npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2014/06/03/31845849
6/john-oliver-helps-rally-45-000-net-neutrality-comments-to-fcc) and
we’d like to do what we can to mitigate any issues this time around.
Stephen - can we have the rate limit on our API key (registered to
[email protected]) raised to something like 10,000
requests/hour? We’re planning to have retries with exponential
backoff to accommodate any instability on your side - is there
anything else that would be helpful for us to adjust on our end?
Thanks,
<image001.jpg>
Mike
From: David Bray
To: Sherry Rand
Subject: Re: Fake DDoS attack?
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 9:27:26 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Mr. Bray
Did the FCC make up a fake DDoS attack to cover up the fact that they lost comments from
net neutrality supporters?
You, the FCC, is claiming that a cyber attack took down your site this week at the same time
that a massive flood of people were trying to comment in support of net neutrality, following
John Oliver's viral segment on Last Week Tonight.
The FCC has offered zero evidence of this alleged DDoS attack, and has even claimed that the
same thing happened during John Oliver's last segment on the issue in 2014. The FCC's
servers have crashed multiple times under the weight of massive public feedback when they
have tried to take away the free speech protections that keep the Internet open. In fact, the
servers went down again on Monday night around the same time that the John Oliver segment
re-aired on HBO.
It seems likely that this alleged DDoS attack is your way of covering up the fact that the FCC
never actually fixed the website so that it could handle the large volume of comments from
supporters of net neutrality. If indeed the site was attacked, it seems likely it was by anti-net
neutrality actor trying to prevent the flood of legitimate comments resulting from the John
Oliver video.
Either way, the public deserves to know what is really going on. This issue affects all of us.
You can't continue making these claims about strangely timed DDoS attacks without proof.
Release your logs to an independent security researcher or major media outlet who can verify
your claims and inform the public about what really happened.
The internet is FREE SPEECH, doesn't belong to you, and should not be controlled by greedy
Verizon or Comcast.
I'm hopping mad like about a million or 2 other voters, and I am sick of being on the short end
of the stick regarding issues which are our RIGHTS and should be upheld as such by the FCC,
which we pay for.
Trump and this corrupt administration is in charge temporarily. We, the voters, are here for
good. History is writing this all down as we speak. Do the right thing.
S. Rand
From: Susan Crawford
To: Ajit Pai; Mignon Clyburn; Mike ORielly
Subject: False Anti-Net Neutrality comments
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 7:33:48 PM
To all concerned,
Whether or not you are aware, there's an issue within the commentary section
of your website. A canned statement against Net Neutrality is being posted
over and over, all instances of it identical. The message itself is obviously
spam as it uses the names of people who didn't post the comment, as well as
locations that don't match their zip code or the respective people (even using
such specific details as their middle names). Finally, all comments are posted
extremely close together, which is suspiciously indicative of a bot. You don't
have to be well versed in cyber warfare to understand that this is clearly an
attempt to sway opinion without actually representing reality.
Again, you don't need to be a detective to see that this message couldn't
possibly have been written identically by so many people. A quick search
through your database will show this chunk of text populating repeatedly. It
would be a good idea for you all to ensure that any of the comments you
receive that follow this pattern are checked to make certain they match the
proper IP address for their alleged location, the time stamps and if you really
feel so inclined, go to one of the many databases that have bought
information from third parties and check to see if these individuals have ever
lived in the areas they are supposedly commenting from. It might take some
time, but I think your due diligence in ensuring that you are truly hearing the
voice of the people and not a program that someone at Comcast, Verizon, or
other such company have written.
Thank you.
From: Nina Stone
To: Ajit Pai
Cc: Mignon Clyburn; Mike ORielly
Subject: False comment spamming with regard to Net Neutrality
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 7:19:41 PM
ALCON,
Whether or not you are aware, an issue exists within the commentary section of your
website. A canned statement against Net Neutrality is being posted over and over, all
quite identical. The message itself is clearly spam as it utilizes the names of people
who did not post the comment, as well as locations that do not match their zip code or
the respective people (even using such a specificity as their middle names). Finally,
all comments are posted extremely close together, which is suspiciously indicative of
a bot. One doesn't need to be well versed in cyber warfare to understand that this is
clearly an attempt to sway opinion without actually representing reality.
Again, one doesn't need to be a detective to see that this message couldn't possibly
have been written identically by so many people. A quick search through your
database will show this chunk of text populating repeatedly. It would behoove you all
to ensure that any of the comments you receive that follow this pattern are checked to
ensure they match the proper IP address for their alleged location, the time stamps
and if you really feel so inclined, go to one of the many databases that have
purchased information from third parties and check to see if these individuals have
ever resided in the areas they are supposedly commenting from. It might take some
time, but I think your due diligence in ensuring that you are truly hearing the word of
the people and not a program that someone at Comcast or Verizon, for example,
have written.
Thank you,
Nina Stone
From: David Bray
To: Jacob Ulrich
Subject: Re: FCC and the role in regulating net neutrality
Date: Thursday, May 18, 2017 12:45:52 PM
Aye here to do the best with what resources are available. For sites wanting to submit
comments in bulk we recommend the URL below as that has been up without issues through
the proceeding.
What becomes more challenging is when folks you bots to submit comments in bulk through
the individual electronic comment filing system which tie-up available resources for actual
humans and thus deny service to some if there are too many bots at once. It does. Are you
wonder why if folks want to submit comments in bulk they aren't using the bulk mechanism?
David,
Thank you for your reply and clarification on your role within the FCC. While it is a shame
the site was having issues as I personally had trouble submitting my comments, I do
understand how difficult it can be to work with limited resources in the government sector.
The amount of fake comments within the system was very troubling
(https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2017/05/net-neutrality-comments-are-being-spammed-
with-anti-obama-boilerplate/), and I personally noticed this as I went to submit my concerns
within the system. Although I suppose it did not mater as Chairman Pai did not bother to take
the wishes of the public into consideration with his upsetting vote today.
Thank you for the work you've done to keep the site up under immense response from the
public, spammers, and apparently DDoS.
Jacob
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 9:31 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Thank you for your note. I am not a Commissioner, I am a non-partisan SES member who
served under Chairman Wheeler and now serves under Chairman Pai. My views on the issue
were never consulted and it is not my place to weigh-in as I have not been hired in that
capacity. My mom-partisan role to provide, given the finite resources available, the ability
for the U.S. public to leave their comments with the FCC.
On what is in my purview:
There have been groups claiming the commenting website crashed. One, the site did not go
down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two, there has always been an alternative
easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file comments
from should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. Three, we have noticed
some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual mechanism (ECFS) to file
comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially making it difficult for
individuals to file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-
in-net-neutrality-battle-1494533379
Groups have also wanted logs regarding the bots and denial of service. On that topic,
the logs have massive amounts of personal IP addresses associated with the comments filed
that the public did not give consent to share publicly and even if we do our best to scrub
there still might be something there that someone did not agree to have shared.
I watched your vote on Net Neutrality legislation today and it is clear to me that the FCC is
nothing but a shill for internet service providers. Your dismissal of the views of the
American people is what troubles me the most. I will do my part to spread the truth about
the FCC and it's role in what will ultimately result in a further increase in broadband pricing.
In a time where corporations have unlimited power over the American people, some of the
biggest corporations in existence were just handed even more. This is your legacy.
Sincerely,
Jacob Ulrich
From: David Bray
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: FCC claims DDoS attacks after HBO show calls out net neutrality rollbacks, and more.
Date: Sunday, May 21, 2017 9:30:07 PM
Hi Greg,
Good to talk to you on Friday and hopefully now you understand that we were being bombarded in real-life with
emails and phone calls too; they've also gone after the Chairman's home and taken photographs through the
windows of this children https://www.theverge.com/platform/amp/2017/5/8/15577988/ajit-pai-protest-door-
hangers-fcc-net-neutrality-proposal
It would be good to do a correction to both articles as they both contain innuendo that implies dimensions to the
attack that simply do not exist. We never said it was from the DarkWeb, so Chris' "expert" is looking in the wrong
place. We're not sharing the logs simply because they contain PII as well as network sensitive information about how
we operate; even Brian Krebs when he had a massive DDoS never shared his logs either.
* The one expert Chris cites in his article is looking at the DarkWeb.
* Chris uses a stilled definition of a DDoS. If you Google "What is a DDoS?" you'll get this link at the top
http://www.digitalattackmap.com/understanding-ddos/ with this definition:
A Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack is an attempt to make an online service unavailable by overwhelming it
with traffic from multiple sources. They target a wide variety of important resources, from banks to news websites,
and present a major challenge to making sure people can publish and access important information.
... if you play the video it says that botnets are typical however that's not the only way to do a DDoS. You'll note
nothing in that definition above says botnet. Yet in his article he still claims a DDoS must be done by a botnet, which
is not true and not been updated.
* We've already shared info that this was akin to the Pokemon Go DDoS attack hitting the API, just using cloud
services to do so.
* Chris uses only one group, a group that's decidedly political on the issue and not the other side.
* Even the title is innuendo. Chris claims "it’s not uncommon for hackers to boast about disrupting operations at a
large organization like the FCC" unless it was a grop that wanted to create the very scene claiming the FCC had
crashed to detracted from the issue?
The two articles fall below the standard of factual reporting we expect from FedScoop and CyberScoop and that, as a
whole, it creates a misleading impression. I recognize everyone was operating under tight timelines to file, so
hopefully now the corrections can be made to the original articles to move forward?
Thank you,
-d.
http://www.zdnet.com/article/cio-diary-lessons-from-the-fcc-bot-swarm/
It would be like asking firefighters for a play-by-play while they were responding.
I have not seen FedScoop yet point out that FftF was wrong when Open Internet happened (2014 not 2015 like they
said). Moreover per the data we released after it was all over, we could handle 250,000 without issue and there
*was* a DDoS event right after the J.O. video in 2014.
That would help balance where we can -- even if we cannot share operational details until it's all over.
-d.
A Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack is an attempt to make an online service unavailable by overwhelming
it with traffic from multiple sources. They target a wide variety of important resources, from banks to news
websites, and present a major challenge to making sure people can publish and access important information.
Again off the record, we're seeing the number of visitors who actually file a comment -- when compared to those
who just want to ping ECFS to shout the equivalent of "Fire!" -- to be very low. In other words, lots of IP addresses
were pinging ECFS and not filing comments -- just shouting at it over and over and over and over.
If the number of requests per hour hitting ECFS actually filed a comment, we'd have a *lot* more comments than
we actually did yesterday -- and a large majority of those requests were from IP addresses with whom you
wouldn't associate a person. Also as noted, even back in 2014 we had no issues with 250,000 comments/day into
ECFS -- yesterday was only about 100,000 comments *plus* a lot of shouting IP addresses not filing comments to
create high traffic.
We don't want to encourage more of these DDoS events -- as we want to do everything we can to allow those who
legitimately want to comment to do as such -- so that's why we're not commenting too much on details for now.
Folks with any view should be able to comment.
Also we stood up, before proceeding 17-108 started, a simple Box.com account as well that folks can also use for
bulk comment filings. Strictly off the record so far we're seeing mostly uploads of video clips to that account, not a
lot of actual comments. https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
Individual Comments Those who wish to file individual comments should submit them electronically via the
Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS) by going to Proceeding 17-108 at https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/
search/proceedings?q=name:((17-108)) and clicking on the "+ Express" link to file an express comment. Bulk
Comments
Best regards,
-d.
How does the FCC qualify a DDoS attack? How do you define whether a particular incident is in fact a DDoS event?
Chris can ask OMR more specific questions and if we can share we will -- the one challenge is if he asks about the
specific type of attack or operational details we can't share that until it's over because they might use what we
share we know (and don't appear to know) to morph the attacks. If Chris wants to ask off-the-record by email
feel free with the same caveats above.
Thanks again for reaching out. Any chance you could talk to our reporter Chris Bing (cc'd here) off-the-record
about this? Of course we'll reach out to OMR about anything on-the-record, but Chris has some more specific
questions that he hopes you might be able to clarify more immediately off the record.
Thanks!
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
Off the record when a DDoS happens -- and in this case is still being attempted even now -- several of us are
more focused on responding to that event; so depending on when you asked OMR they may have been rather
busy or IT staff weren't available to share details at that time.
Hi David,
Thanks for the background on all of this; it certainly helps. It's not our intent to do anything but tell an
accurate story. Yesterday one of our reporters contacted the FCC press staff and they declined to comment on
what he and we thought were valid questions. With that, we did the best we could to be fair to the FCC given
your statement and the other contextual information of the show and the advocacy group.
If it's possible to talk more about it on the record and to update and reflect that in the story, we'd be more
than happy to do so with more context from the your office.
Please let me know. I'm happy to jump on a call at any time today.
Best,
Billy
Just a heads-up as I have done earlier articles with FedScoop and off the record, the group that
claimed folks fought for Open Internet were wrong about it occurring in 2015. The 14-28 (Open
Internet) proceeding was in 2014.
Also off-the-record, yes -- there was a similar DDoS attack after the 2014 J.O. clip. We later
released the total count of comments received to show this without saying this. Specifically his
video at the time in June 2014 only increased the rate from 5,000 a day to 25,000 a day. Yet we
had issues because of a parallel DDoS. Later when the proceeding neared the end we were able to
accept 250,000 proceedings with our issue because a DDoS attack wasn't coinciding.
At the time the Chairman did not want to say there was a DDoS attack out of concern of copycats.
So we accepted the punches that it somehow crashed because of volume even though actual
comment volume wasn't an issue. Counts from the 2014 proceeding by day are
here https://www.fcc.gov/news-events/blog/2014/09/17/update-volume-open-internet-
comments-submitted-fcc
Activist groups like to create news. Yesterday we only got about 100,000 comments -- which if we
can accept 250,000 comments without issue should tell you something about that group's claims.
Hope this helps as background because your story is a tad leaning to the other group without
checking their claims -- to include incorrectly getting the date when all this actually happened?
Best regards,
From: David Bray
To: Greg Otto; [email protected]
Subject: FW: FCC claims DDoS attacks after HBO show calls out net neutrality rollbacks, and more.
Date: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 7:24:00 PM
From: Billy Mitchell [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:28 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FCC claims DDoS attacks after HBO show calls out net neutrality rollbacks, and more.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 10:21 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Yes it might be good to ask again now as everyone has more bandwidth... folks were busy here.
Offer to do it on background as a phone call and you can indicate that you and I have worked together in the past. If
you want, you can even send a separate email to [email protected] and cc me (separate title, etc.) and I can
provide chime in that this would be good for the public. Hope this helps.
Hi David,
We did quite early on and received a "decline to comment," which our story reflects.
Thanks,
Billy
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 10:13 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Billy, have you contacted our Office of Media Relations/Mark Wigfield? That would be the best path to first try
for an on the record or even a background?
-d.
Subject: Re: FCC claims DDoS attacks after HBO show calls out net neutrality rollbacks, and more.
Hey David,
Thanks for sticking with us through this. We want to be as fair as possible with all this, and would love to get
something on the record, or at least on the record but not for direct attribution to tell FCC's side of it. To this point,
though, we haven't been able to.
Best,
Billy
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 12:31 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Off the record -- I am still concerned this "claim" issue was playing into the hands of a certain political advocacy
group, I am also surprised folks haven't pieced together that if there were lots of bots submitting the same
messages over and over (at speeds much faster than humans) then yes that could have tied up the API and denied
service to humans also using the website with the same API, i.e., a DDoS. Google the Pokémon Go attack if you
are not familiar with this form of denial of service; a DDoS doesn't have to use DarkWeb machines to deny
service, commercial cloud vendors hosting bots will work just as well.
Fortunately this news outlet did piece the cyber-related puzzle pieces together this
evening: https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-
1494533379
Which incidentally was an off-the-record story I told to Wyatt Kash weeks ago when I was at SxSW, before this
event, about what also happened in 2014 if you want to verify.
Best regards,
-d.
Right now OMR has been designated as the official on-the-record conduit.
Chris can ask OMR more specific questions and if we can share we will -- the one challenge is if he asks about the
specific type of attack or operational details we can't share that until it's over because they might use what we
share we know (and don't appear to know) to morph the attacks. If Chris wants to ask off-the-record by email
feel free with the same caveats above.
Hi David,
Thanks again for reaching out. Any chance you could talk to our reporter Chris Bing (cc'd here) off-the-record
about this? Of course we'll reach out to OMR about anything on-the-record, but Chris has some more specific
questions that he hopes you might be able to clarify more immediately off the record.
Thanks!
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
Feel free to ask OMR about whether a similar DDoS happened in 2014, as I believe both Politico and WSJ
have asked and gotten the correct info (they also sorted that the group had the wrong year for when the Open
Internet proceeding happened).
Off the record when a DDoS happens -- and in this case is still being attempted even now -- several of us are
more focused on responding to that event; so depending on when you asked OMR they may have been rather
busy or IT staff weren't available to share details at that time.
Hi David,
Thanks for the background on all of this; it certainly helps. It's not our intent to do anything but tell an accurate
story. Yesterday one of our reporters contacted the FCC press staff and they declined to comment on what he
and we thought were valid questions. With that, we did the best we could to be fair to the FCC given your
statement and the other contextual information of the show and the advocacy group.
If it's possible to talk more about it on the record and to update and reflect that in the story, we'd be more than
happy to do so with more context from the your office.
Please let me know. I'm happy to jump on a call at any time today.
Best,
Billy
Just a heads-up as I have done earlier articles with FedScoop and off the record, the group that
claimed folks fought for Open Internet were wrong about it occurring in 2015. The 14-28 (Open
Internet) proceeding was in 2014.
Also off-the-record, yes -- there was a similar DDoS attack after the 2014 J.O. clip. We later
released the total count of comments received to show this without saying this. Specifically his
video at the time in June 2014 only increased the rate from 5,000 a day to 25,000 a day. Yet we
had issues because of a parallel DDoS. Later when the proceeding neared the end we were able to
accept 250,000 proceedings with our issue because a DDoS attack wasn't coinciding.
At the time the Chairman did not want to say there was a DDoS attack out of concern of copycats.
So we accepted the punches that it somehow crashed because of volume even though actual
comment volume wasn't an issue. Counts from the 2014 proceeding by day are
here https://www fcc.gov/news-events/blog/2014/09/17/update-volume-open-internet-comments-
submitted-fcc
Activist groups like to create news. Yesterday we only got about 100,000 comments -- which if
we can accept 250,000 comments without issue should tell you something about that group's
claims.
Hope this helps as background because your story is a tad leaning to the other group without
checking their claims -- to include incorrectly getting the date when all this actually happened?
Best regards,
-d.
Lawmakers have an idea for how OPM can hire more cybersecurity pros.
Off the record -- I am still concerned this "claim" issue was playing into the hands of a certain political advocacy
group, I am also surprised folks haven't pieced together that if there were lots of bots submitting the same
messages over and over (at speeds much faster than humans) then yes that could have tied up the API and denied
service to humans also using the website with the same API, i.e., a DDoS. Google the Pokémon Go attack if you
are not familiar with this form of denial of service; a DDoS doesn't have to use DarkWeb machines to deny
service, commercial cloud vendors hosting bots will work just as well.
Fortunately this news outlet did piece the cyber-related puzzle pieces together this
evening: https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-
1494533379
Which incidentally was an off-the-record story I told to Wyatt Kash weeks ago when I was at SxSW, before this
event, about what also happened in 2014 if you want to verify.
Best regards,
-d.
Chris can ask OMR more specific questions and if we can share we will -- the one challenge is if he asks about the
specific type of attack or operational details we can't share that until it's over because they might use what we
share we know (and don't appear to know) to morph the attacks. If Chris wants to ask off-the-record by email
feel free with the same caveats above.
Thanks again for reaching out. Any chance you could talk to our reporter Chris Bing (cc'd here) off-the-record
about this? Of course we'll reach out to OMR about anything on-the-record, but Chris has some more specific
questions that he hopes you might be able to clarify more immediately off the record.
Thanks!
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
Off the record when a DDoS happens -- and in this case is still being attempted even now -- several of us are
more focused on responding to that event; so depending on when you asked OMR they may have been rather
busy or IT staff weren't available to share details at that time.
Hi David,
Thanks for the background on all of this; it certainly helps. It's not our intent to do anything but tell an accurate
story. Yesterday one of our reporters contacted the FCC press staff and they declined to comment on what he
and we thought were valid questions. With that, we did the best we could to be fair to the FCC given your
statement and the other contextual information of the show and the advocacy group.
If it's possible to talk more about it on the record and to update and reflect that in the story, we'd be more than
happy to do so with more context from the your office.
Please let me know. I'm happy to jump on a call at any time today.
Best,
Billy
Just a heads-up as I have done earlier articles with FedScoop and off the record, the group that
claimed folks fought for Open Internet were wrong about it occurring in 2015. The 14-28 (Open
Internet) proceeding was in 2014.
Also off-the-record, yes -- there was a similar DDoS attack after the 2014 J.O. clip. We later
released the total count of comments received to show this without saying this. Specifically his
video at the time in June 2014 only increased the rate from 5,000 a day to 25,000 a day. Yet we
had issues because of a parallel DDoS. Later when the proceeding neared the end we were able to
accept 250,000 proceedings with our issue because a DDoS attack wasn't coinciding.
At the time the Chairman did not want to say there was a DDoS attack out of concern of copycats.
So we accepted the punches that it somehow crashed because of volume even though actual
comment volume wasn't an issue. Counts from the 2014 proceeding by day are
here https://www.fcc.gov/news-events/blog/2014/09/17/update-volume-open-internet-comments-
From: [email protected]
To: Billy Mitchell
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]; Goldy Kamali
Subject: Re: FCC claims DDoS attacks after HBO show calls out net neutrality rollbacks, and more.
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 8:50:18 AM
Feel free to ask OMR about whether a similar DDoS happened in 2014, as I believe both Politico and WSJ
have asked and gotten the correct info (they also sorted that the group had the wrong year for when the Open
Internet proceeding happened).
Off the record when a DDoS happens -- and in this case is still being attempted even now -- several of us are
more focused on responding to that event; so depending on when you asked OMR they may have been rather
busy or IT staff weren't available to share details at that time.
Hi David,
Thanks for the background on all of this; it certainly helps. It's not our intent to do anything but tell an accurate
story. Yesterday one of our reporters contacted the FCC press staff and they declined to comment on what he
and we thought were valid questions. With that, we did the best we could to be fair to the FCC given your
statement and the other contextual information of the show and the advocacy group.
If it's possible to talk more about it on the record and to update and reflect that in the story, we'd be more than
happy to do so with more context from the your office.
Please let me know. I'm happy to jump on a call at any time today.
Best,
Billy
Just a heads-up as I have done earlier articles with FedScoop and off the record, the group that
claimed folks fought for Open Internet were wrong about it occurring in 2015. The 14-28 (Open
Internet) proceeding was in 2014.
Also off-the-record, yes -- there was a similar DDoS attack after the 2014 J.O. clip. We later
released the total count of comments received to show this without saying this. Specifically his
video at the time in June 2014 only increased the rate from 5,000 a day to 25,000 a day. Yet we
had issues because of a parallel DDoS. Later when the proceeding neared the end we were able to
accept 250,000 proceedings with our issue because a DDoS attack wasn't coinciding.
At the time the Chairman did not want to say there was a DDoS attack out of concern of copycats.
So we accepted the punches that it somehow crashed because of volume even though actual
comment volume wasn't an issue. Counts from the 2014 proceeding by day are
here https://www.fcc.gov/news-events/blog/2014/09/17/update-volume-open-internet-comments-
submitted-fcc
Activist groups like to create news. Yesterday we only got about 100,000 comments -- which if
we can accept 250,000 comments without issue should tell you something about that group's
claims.
Hope this helps as background because your story is a tad leaning to the other group without
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]; Goldy Kamali
Subject: Re: FCC claims DDoS attacks after HBO show calls out net neutrality rollbacks, and more.
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 6:17:24 AM
Just a heads-up as I have done earlier articles with FedScoop and off the record, the group that claimed
folks fought for Open Internet were wrong about it occurring in 2015. The 14-28 (Open Internet)
proceeding was in 2014.
Also off-the-record, yes -- there was a similar DDoS attack after the 2014 J.O. clip. We later released the
total count of comments received to show this without saying this. Specifically his video at the time in
June 2014 only increased the rate from 5,000 a day to 25,000 a day. Yet we had issues because of a
parallel DDoS. Later when the proceeding neared the end we were able to accept 250,000 proceedings
with our issue because a DDoS attack wasn't coinciding.
At the time the Chairman did not want to say there was a DDoS attack out of concern of copycats. So we
accepted the punches that it somehow crashed because of volume even though actual comment volume
wasn't an issue. Counts from the 2014 proceeding by day are here https://www.fcc.gov/news-
events/blog/2014/09/17/update-volume-open-internet-comments-submitted-fcc
Activist groups like to create news. Yesterday we only got about 100,000 comments -- which if we can
accept 250,000 comments without issue should tell you something about that group's claims.
Hope this helps as background because your story is a tad leaning to the other group without checking
their claims -- to include incorrectly getting the date when all this actually happened?
Best regards,
-d.
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 5:49 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: FCC comments site
(b) (5)
Hi David, the FCC comments site has been inconsistent again today. Is there another DDoS
attack, or is the downtime due to comment volume? Thanks.
__________
Jon Brodkin
Senior IT Reporter
Ars Technica
Ars Orbiting HQ
From: David Bray
To: Make, Jonathan; ECFSHelp; Melissa Askew
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Mark Stone
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 5:34:56 PM
Perhaps though there is an option to make something confidential after it has been shown. Please
work with them on specifics and then we can see where they are in the queue.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:31 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; ECFSHelp <[email protected]>; Melissa Askew
<[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Mark Stone <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
These were filings that on Friday were available in ECFS, for instance, but today were not. So I don’t
think a staff approval of the filings issue.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:29 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; ECFSHelp; Melissa Askew
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Mark Stone
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
Work with ECFShelp and they can see where they are – they might not have been approved for
public release yet. There’s a two-step process.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:28 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; ECFSHelp <[email protected]>; Melissa Askew
<[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Mark Stone <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
All proceedings. Sorry, have not had a chance to formally send the email. Many filings were missing
from ECFS. Only certain ones could be viewed. When say filtering all non-express comments from
today, or from yesterday and today. Thanks.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:21 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; ECFSHelp; Melissa Askew
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Mark Stone
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
Do you have a confirmation number? I’m looping in [email protected]
Which proceeding?
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:19 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
Hi David and Mark – It’s that previously filed and previously available comments on ECFS were not
available on ECFS. Jonathan
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:19 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
ECFS is up – are you saying that CGB/OSEC just haven’t approved comments for public viewing that
were filed?
Have you contacted ECFShelp?
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:16 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
If the DDOS announcement didn’t supersede it, sure, I can do this.
Mark, any comment re ECFS not working?
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 1:19 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
Hi Jonathan, probably best to contact [email protected] or 202-418-0193 first – there is a human-
based approval process that CGB uses to release comments received so they may be focused on
other proceedings.
IT-wise the system is running.
Hope this helps.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 1:17 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: FCC ECFS
It seems like it’s not showing most substantive comments that were filed using it on Friday and
Monday. Only showing mostly net neutrality brief comments. Even some comments that were
accessible Friday through a key date search eliminating any express filings are not accessible today.
David, do you need me to submit something?
Mark, any comment?
Thanks.
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield; Make, Jonathan
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 5:19:00 PM
I think he’s looking for comments that were filed on Friday and Monday – though it’s not clear which
ones they are.
I recommend indicating which ones you were expecting and then contact ECFShelp who can let you
know if they’re in the queue for approval for public release. It’s not an IT issue as the website is right
now responsive.
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:18 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
So you are saying this is a separate issue from the DDOS attack?
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:16 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
If the DDOS announcement didn’t supersede it, sure, I can do this.
Mark, any comment re ECFS not working?
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 1:19 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS
Hi Jonathan, probably best to contact [email protected] or 202-418-0193 first – there is a human-
based approval process that CGB uses to release comments received so they may be focused on
other proceedings.
IT-wise the system is running.
Hope this helps.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 1:17 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: FCC ECFS
It seems like it’s not showing most substantive comments that were filed using it on Friday and
Monday. Only showing mostly net neutrality brief comments. Even some comments that were
accessible Friday through a key date search eliminating any express filings are not accessible today.
David, do you need me to submit something?
Mark, any comment?
Thanks.
From: ECFSHelp
To: David Bray; Jude M.; ECFSHelp
Cc: Mark Stone
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS Filing Confirmation
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 4:45:41 PM
Jude M
Thank you for contacting the FCC. Your comment was received at 12:25 pm and posted to ecfs at
3:18pm. There is a two hour window before filings are posted to ecfs allowing filers an opportunity
to have their filing deleted from ecfs before it is posted to the system. Any filings received after 5pm
will not be available for viewing until 11 am the next business day.
Thanks
Melisa
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 3:47 PM
To: Jude M (b) (6) ECFSHelp <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Stone <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FCC ECFS Filing Confirmation
Dear ECFSHelp,
Can you provide background on the review -- I believe it is to allow users to modify their
comment before it goes public. Also can you help Jude with locating the comment?
Thank you.
-d.
David,
Did I miss a message informing me of the intentional delay? I don't appear to have received
anything about the unintentional additional delay.
Comment was received per the confirmation link below -- there is a process in which it later
is made available to the public usually every 2 hours after receipt during normal business
hours. [email protected] can assist
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/filing/status/detail/20170509591222073
David,
Where's my comment?
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?
authors_name=Jude%20Melancon&proceedings_name=17-108
-Jude M.
Thank you for your submission to the FCC Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS).
Please Note that your filing will not be available for searching until it has been reviewed
and posted by the FCC.
Brief Comments: ISPs are obviously common carriers subject to regulation under Title II.
Verizon v FCC established that pretending otherwise doesn't allow for regulating them
appropriately. ISPs need to stay classified as Title II common carriers.
Content-based slowing of consumer internet connections is reason enough alone for this to
be profoundly obvious to anyone honest and informed. However, they're certainly not the
biggest problem with having neither proper regulation nor a conscience be involved in
running effective monopolies on usable access to the greatest communication system in
human history.
(b) (5)
From: ECFSHelp
Sent: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 1:34:15 PM
To: David Bray
Subject: RE: FCC ECFS Filing Confirmation
(b)
(5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 1:23 PM
To: (b) (6) ECFSHelp <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FCC ECFS Filing Confirmation
Comment was received per the confirmation link below -- there is a process in which it later is
made available to the public usually every 2 hours after receipt during normal business hours.
[email protected] can assist
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/filing/status/detail/20170509591222073
Thank you for your submission to the FCC Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS).
Please Note that your filing will not be available for searching until it has been reviewed and
posted by the FCC.
Brief Comments: ISPs are obviously common carriers subject to regulation under Title II.
Verizon v FCC established that pretending otherwise doesn't allow for regulating them
appropriately. ISPs need to stay classified as Title II common carriers.
Content-based slowing of consumer internet connections is reason enough alone for this to be
profoundly obvious to anyone honest and informed. However, they're certainly not the biggest
problem with having neither proper regulation nor a conscience be involved in running
effective monopolies on usable access to the greatest communication system in human history.
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:55 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: Neil Grace <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Fight for the Future comment questiosn DDOS attack
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:45 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: Neil Grace <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Fight for the Future comment questiosn DDOS attack
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:43 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: Neil Grace <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Fight for the Future comment questiosn DDOS attack
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:37 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
(b) (5)
(b)
(5)
From: McKinnon, John [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:29 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace
<[email protected]>
Subject: Fight for the Future comment
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has issued a press release claiming that
it’s website was hit with a DDoS attack at the exact same time that comments would have
started flooding in from John Oliver’s viral Last Week Tonight segment about net neutrality
on Sunday night. The media widely reported that the surge in comments from the segment
crashed the FCC’s site, which also happened several times during the massive grassroots
mobilization that led to the current FCC rules in 2014 and 2015.
Fight for the Future, a leading digital rights group that has organized some of the largest
actions in support of net neutrality, issued the following statement, which can be attributed
to Campaign Director Evan Greer (pronouns: she/hers:)
“The FCC’s statement today raises a lot of questions, and the agency should act
immediately to ensure that voices of the public are not being silenced as it considers a
move that would affect every single person that uses the Internet.
There are two possible scenarios and they are both concerning:
1. FCC is being intentionally misleading, and trying to claim that the surge in traffic
from large numbers of people attempting to access following John Oliver’s segment
amounts to a “DDoS” attack, in order to let themselves off the hook for essentially
silencing large numbers of people by not having a properly functioning site to
receive comments from the public about an important issue, or
2. Someone actually did DDoS the FCC’s site at the exact same time as John
Oliver’s segment, in order to actively prevent people from commenting in support
of keeping the Title II net neutrality rules that millions of people fought for in 2015.
Given Ajit Pai’s open hostility toward net neutrality, and the telecom industry’s long history
of astroturfing and paying shady organizations to do their dirty work, either of these
scenarios should be concerning for anyone who cares about government transparency,
free speech, and the future of the Internet.
The FCC should immediately release its logs to an independent security analyst or major
news outlet to verify exactly what happened last night. The public deserves to know, and
the FCC has a responsibility to maintain a functioning website and ensure that every
member of the public who wants to submit a comment about net neutrality has the ability to
do so. Anything less is a subversion of our democracy.”
Fight for the Future was instrumental in the massive grassroots campaign that successfully
pushed the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to enact the strongest net
neutrality protections in US. history last year. They built the page BattleForTheNet.com,
which was responsible for more than ¼ of all the net neutrality comments received by the
FCC during its feedback process, and were behind the Internet Slowdown protest, which
was supported by more than 40,000 websites including some of the largest on the Web like
Kickstarter, Etsy, Netflix, and Tumblr.
The group also helped take the fight for net neutrality into the streets with creative protest
campaigns like Occupy the FCC and the nationwide Internet Emergency protests.
Fight for the Future is best known for their role in the massive online protests against
SOPA, the Stop Online Piracy Act, and continues to organize many of the largest protests
in the history of the Internet. Over the summer, they organized the high profile Rock Against
the TPP tour featuring many celebrities and well known musicians. Learn more at
FightFortheFuture.org
###
From: Miller, Jason
To: David Bray
Subject: RE: Files for the CCOE
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 4:06:54 PM
Thanks on both.
Sen. Wyden wrote a letter to the FCC about the DDoS attack.
https://www.wyden.senate.gov/download/?id=AE80F574-81AE-4877-B9D4-
4EC860BE6103&download=1
Jason Miller
Executive Editor
Federal News Radio
202-895-5282
www.federalnewsradio.com
@jmillerwfed
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 4:02 PM
To: Miller, Jason
Subject: Fw: Files for the CCOE
Hi Jason - here's a draft, not for public release yet.
Also, on background:
Counts from the 2014 proceeding by day are here https://www.fcc.gov/news-
events/blog/2014/09/17/update-volume-open-internet-comments-submitted-fcc
Specifically his video at the time in June 2014 only increased the rate from 5,000 a day to
25,000 a day. Yet we had issues because of a parallel DDoS. Later when the proceeding neared
the end we were able to accept 250,000 proceedings with our issue because a DDoS attack
wasn't coinciding. At the time the Chairman did not want to say there was a DDoS attack out
of concern of copycats. So we accepted the punches that it somehow crashed because of
volume even though actual comment volume wasn't an issue.
Activist groups like to create news. Yesterday we only got about 100,000 comments -- which if
we can accept 250,000 comments without issue should tell you something about that group's
claims.
Onwards and upwards together,
-d.
Hi All.
Tomorrow, March 23rd, is the day we were hoping to hear from you regarding the
Playbook.
I have attached a copy to this e-mail to make locating it more convenient. Please feel
free to turn on Track Changes and make your comments.
Thank you for the consideration.
/vr/
Wm Kermit McKelvy, CBAP®, CBA®, PMP® | Phone: 202.357.9639
Office of IT Services
Office of Information Technology Category (ITC)
Federal Acquisition Service (FAS)
U.S. General Services Administration (GSA)
On Fri, Mar 17, 2017 at 12:32 PM, Kermit McKelvy - QT3GA <[email protected]>
wrote:
Hi All. Thank you for your attention and questions on the Playbook in our meeting
yesterday.
As a follow up, we would really appreciate it if you would provide feedback on the
document (See attached to original message. Disregard yellow highlights).
Comments beyond grammar are especially appreciated. We are happy to hear about
your Playbook ideas beyond this document as well. Please use Tracked Changes to
make your comments and edits.
Can we get your feedback by Thursday, March 23rd?
Again, thanks for your help to date. We will keep you posted regarding our progress.
/vr/
On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 3:09 PM, Kim Pack - QTGBC-C <[email protected]>
wrote:
Attached are files we will be using for the CCOE.
Kimberly Pack
Wolf Den Associates
Mobile: (571) 318-0328
In support of the:
GSA Federal Acquisition Service (FAS)
Customer Engagement and Solutions Development Division
1800 F Street
Washington, DC
From: David Bray
To: [email protected]
Subject: Fw: Files for the CCOE
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 4:01:58 PM
Attachments: CloudComputeAcqPlaybook Final v4.0.docx
Also, on background:
Counts from the 2014 proceeding by day are here https://www.fcc.gov/news-
events/blog/2014/09/17/update-volume-open-internet-comments-submitted-fcc
Specifically his video at the time in June 2014 only increased the rate from 5,000 a day to
25,000 a day. Yet we had issues because of a parallel DDoS. Later when the proceeding neared
the end we were able to accept 250,000 proceedings with our issue because a DDoS attack
wasn't coinciding. At the time the Chairman did not want to say there was a DDoS attack out
of concern of copycats. So we accepted the punches that it somehow crashed because of
volume even though actual comment volume wasn't an issue.
Activist groups like to create news. Yesterday we only got about 100,000 comments -- which if
we can accept 250,000 comments without issue should tell you something about that group's
claims.
-d.
Hi All.
Tomorrow, March 23rd, is the day we were hoping to hear from you regarding the
Playbook.
I have attached a copy to this e-mail to make locating it more convenient. Please feel
free to turn on Track Changes and make your comments.
Thank you for the consideration.
/vr/
On Fri, Mar 17, 2017 at 12:32 PM, Kermit McKelvy - QT3GA <[email protected]>
wrote:
Hi All. Thank you for your attention and questions on the Playbook in our meeting
yesterday.
As a follow up, we would really appreciate it if you would provide feedback on the
document (See attached to original message. Disregard yellow highlights).
Comments beyond grammar are especially appreciated. We are happy to hear about
your Playbook ideas beyond this document as well. Please use Tracked Changes to
make your comments and edits.
Again, thanks for your help to date. We will keep you posted regarding our progress.
/vr/
On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 3:09 PM, Kim Pack - QTGBC-C <[email protected]>
wrote:
In support of the:
GSA Federal Acquisition Service (FAS)
Customer Engagement and Solutions Development Division
1800 F Street
Washington, DC
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook
A Guide to Ordering Cloud
(Working Draft)
March 2017
It is the assertion of this team, as a result of research and experience, that most of the inhibitors
to federal cloud adoption are not technical in nature but the result of social and cultural
constraints. As a result, the approach to increase the velocity of adoption for cloud computing in
the Federal Government will be addressed with highly effective methods to address knowledge,
understanding and application of cloud computing within the Government. A playbook that
identifies, explains and offers flexible paths to cloud acquisition and adoption can effectively
reduce or remove these barriers to increase cloud deployment in the Federal Government. The
Playbook is scenario based and explains a certain connected set of issues that provide a firm
foundation and clear understanding of how to apply cloud technology in the Federal
Government. Agency stakeholders are able to match key attributes of their agencies expected
situation to attributes of the provided scenarios to match their situation to the specific scenario
that best illuminates guidelines and a path forward for their situation. The guidelines and path-
forward information are compact and succinct to facilitate agency action. Should agency
stakeholders have less familiarity with cloud and require more detailed information, the
Playbook provides layered details of information and background in Discussion, Expanded
Topics and Advanced Cloud sections. Beyond the scenarios, some of the topics covered in the
playbook include defining cloud, paying for cloud, managed data center services, and strategic
considerations for cloud. Additionally, cloud is a contemporary technology that applies IT
capabilities with highly variable usage that stretch perceived regulatory limits in areas like
funding or contract types. To this end, the playbook will provide thoughtful insights about
historically differentiated, but appropriate, application of regulations to the cloud environment
pertaining mainly to paying for cloud.
While this Playbook endorses the computing services that are fully compliant with the NIST
cloud characteristics, the concepts within this Playbook apply equally well to any IT “as-a-
service” that have consumption based pricing, fully eliminate related capital expenditures, and
present packaged services consistent with commercial best practices.
1
http://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/Legacy/SP/nistspecialpublication800-145.pdf
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 4
The broad deployment of those services within the Federal Government has put pressure on
Government systems that were not designed to accommodate the variable usage and quick-pay
cycles that are the hallmark of the cloud computing models that are based on consumption.
Unlike business-to-business contracts, Government contracts are constrained by fiscal laws as
well. The Government cannot incur obligations in excess of contract funding, nor can the
Government front-load funding for more support and services than are expected. To cope with
quick usage to bill cycles, the Federal Government must obligate money commensurate with
current federal law which requires agencies to either set aside a large amount of money for
corresponding services it may never fully consume or set aside a little money that may not cover
its full and actual service consumption. The Federal Government does not currently have these
kinds of usage-to-quick-payment capabilities in its systems. As a result, it currently accepts a set
of funding mechanisms that cost (at best) the Federal Government 67% more than necessary for
those services or routinely accepts risk of anti-deficiency. The current structure of Federal funds
systems works directly against the advantages and intended business and value elegances of
cloud computing. This is the most impactful issue facing the Federal Government with cloud
computing. There are other disadvantages in the current Federal structures but are relatively
minor compared to funding.
To solve the funding challenge, the Playbook recommends a set of actions that mitigate these
disadvantages. Most importantly, it recommends the free and active use of Time and Materials
type contracts for cloud computing contracts, and a clarification of Time and Materials
contracting within the FAR. Specific approaches, pros and cons, and additional detail are in the
playbook chapter Paying for Cloud.
Knowing the answers to these questions allows an agency stakeholder to immediately turn to the
play that intersects most often with the answers to the knowledge questions of the agency. Once
the agency locates the tab to that particular play, they can turn to that section of the playbook to
begin preparing for and acquiring that service. Because it is true the playbook is not exhaustive,
program managers must be willing to assess intent, generally apply criteria and make decisions
when using the playbook tools. The decision regarding the proximity of the situation of the
agency to these factors will result in valuable and actionable information allowing them to get
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 5
scenario and deals in depth with the key points, risk management, and benefit assessment.
The deepest information transmission and learning takes place in these discussions.
Play Definitions
Establishing Cloud
Scenario:
● You are in a small agency (10,000).
● Your solution to data center consolidation is an IaaS solution.
● Your plan is to complete movement onto the solution in phases. You are in phase I.
● Phase I goal is to move key support infrastructure and four related mission critical
applications into the cloud.
● Systems development efforts have been fragmented over time and recent centralized
documentation efforts have highlighted inconsistent standards and coverage gaps.
● You are the director for infrastructure services.
● You have client server based premise solutions for the majority of your mission services.
● Many of your current infrastructure services are virtualized.
● Your COR functions are basic, meeting minimum requirements and focused on validating
payments. Service surveillance is compliant, minimal and mainly by exception.
Additional Assumptions
● Agency staff and support contractors will have application support expertise but limited
expertise or bandwidth for executing application upgrade and migration tasks.
● The agency has a national presence across the United States.
● You prefer the maximum control and touch your current staff can apply.
Checklist
❏ Inventory and definition of infrastructure services.
❏ Current enterprise and solution architecture documentation.
❏ Current application definition list.
❏ Application reconciliation contract or internal work plan.
❏ Organizational knowledge development plan.
❏ Thorough market research for CSP’s.
Key Questions
● What is the condition of your enterprise architecture blueprints? Are they good enough to
facilitate migration of the LOB apps to a CSP?
● Is your security breach and notification plan thorough, compliant and resilient?
● Will you need a headcount surge plan to support cutover periods during migration?
● Are you planning for changes to your DR and COOP plans necessary?
● Are your administration rights, delegation, and credential issuing plans sound?
Discussion
There are three main elements within an inventory and assessment phase that will provide a
foundation and roadmap for modernizing the IT enterprise. The inventory, through both
automated scans and gathering information from stakeholders, will document all IT assets and
provide both physical organization and a logical organization to those assets such as by
application system, environment (dev, production, etc.), circuit, physical location, and
organizational control. The next element is the application rationalization which documents
business functions and system integrations and outputs specific modernization plans and
recommendations including eliminating duplicative systems by merging application functions,
terminating legacy applications with minimal business value, and complete application re-
engineering as appropriate when warranted. The third element is the actual migration planning
which is often constrained by budgetary considerations and necessarily takes into account risk
assessments for prioritization. GSA developed at the behest of OMB and in collaboration with
industry partners a set of SOO templates for agency use in acquiring cloud migration services 2.
Goals for the inventory and assessment work will include 1) a complete inventory and
assessment to establish a baseline for later migration implementation phases and 2) producing a
rationalization and modernization plan for the targeted support infrastructure and four mission
critical applications.
Application Preparation
The existing agency experience with virtualization for its current server assets will be a benefit in
capacity planning and right-sizing VM resources in the target environment. However, the
2
https://gsa.gov/portal/content/141191
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 8
prevalence of client-server architecture generally does not indicate a fully service oriented cloud-
ready architecture and the agency can reasonably expect various levels of application refactoring
to be required in the move to the cloud. The detailed application assessment process presents the
opportunity to make appropriate investments in modernization such as to enhance business
value, improve security to latest standards, rationalize and consolidate data stores, and reduce
complexity while migrating to a scalable platform.
High level goals for the to-be state at the end of the acquisition for the targeted support
infrastructure and the four mission related applications will be necessary to guide the contractor.
To the extent that agency enterprise architecture standards are already developed, these need to
be part of the referenced standards in the acquisition. Given the minimal cloud adoption of the
agency, these standards likely may not currently reflect your future state or at least will be
lacking considerable details that will be developed during this project. This type of
documentation and standards maintenance should be built into a strong governance and change
management process at the agency. Whether these structures and guidance is complete at the
outset, guidelines need to be provided in the acquisition to ensure agency IT services agility and
responsiveness are achieved and enhanced.
The challenge in this scenario is that at the time of acquisition, without reliable and
comprehensive inventory and application dependency information, bidding contractors will have
a difficult time making accurate estimates for the scope of application modernization efforts to
undertake. One approach for managing this work includes using Time and Materials CLINs for
this part of the work and requesting multiple options with trade-offs be produced in the plans
prepared for the rationalization and modernization effort. Alternatively, one or more optional
CLINs could be used for selectively undertaking recommendations arising from the assessment.
Migration Support
An effort of this scope and criticality to agency mission will require significant resources to plan
and execute the migration of these related systems. Project management and stakeholder
coordination support in addition to the technical expertise for planning the cloud environment,
configuration, testing, building and scheduling the cutover plan, to name a few, are all activities
to be performed. You should expect resources to ramp up and down for this part of the work
since minimal resources can be effectively deployed until the inventory & assessment is
complete.
Network architecture and agency circuit capacity for the network traffic between agency
premises and the CSP will be a key planning element. Patterns vary widely for network traffic
and utilization by applications based on the variety of types, number, and logical location
(public, internal agency, trusted systems, etc.) of users and systems connecting as well as the
amount of data transferred. Your inventory and assessment phase will consider these issues and
could even indicate a scope change to the targeted migrated systems based on this information.
To the extent possible within this project and acquisition, executing a phased migration with, for
example, the key support infrastructure moving first, likely will lower risk more than performing
a complete cutover of all targeted applications at once. Subsequently, migration of four targeted
applications individually may limit the scope of potential related mission delivery problems.
Since moving a significant portion of IT services is contemplated in this project, a phased
approach to effectively test networking, latency, and overall service performance will be a useful
in potentially limiting the scope of affected systems with each change. As key support
infrastructure is to be moved, an opportunity for moving it first or early can shed light on
undocumented dependencies within the systems and applications that are not in scope for
migration in this phase. Similarly, moving individual components within an application in stages
also can mitigate cutover risk in the cases when it is architecturally feasible to do so. Effective
testing of production systems in new environments can be challenging and given the mission
critical nature of the targeted applications these strategies may prove effective.
CSP
CSP specific requirements likely won’t be numerous in a scenario where there is little agency
cloud footprint and this acquisition will represent the first significant foray into cloud. There will
of course be DR and COOP requirements but these are better treated at the application level
versus viewing the CSP as a traditional datacenter and layering on outmoded legacy backup
requirements. The goal is a transition to the cloud and an associated operational transformation
to an efficient service oriented posture. Geographic diversity is one such requirement to include
but is easily met by most CSP and can be programmatically achieved by changing one parameter
in the API call to instantiate the resource. Granted, not all (and perhaps even few) typical Federal
agency applications will ever be re-engineered into fully next generation cloud-designed
applications that are stateless works of resiliency but it still makes sense to position the
organization to leverage this potential where appropriate.
This scenario contemplates migration of 4 mission critical applications. Of course, there needs to
be application availability SLA’s but these will rest with the contractor layering managed
services above the CSP and not directly with the CSP hosting the resources. The implementation
path the contractor implements to achieve those service level objectives (SLOs) will vary based
3
https://www.dhs.gov/trusted-internet-connections
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 10
on the particulars of the application architecture. Specifying those goals can influence the
approaches taken during the application preparation phases to enhance application resiliency.
Recovery Time Objectives (RTO) and Recovery Point Objectives (RPO) are more appropriately
specified at the application level (or standardized across groups of applications). CSP-specific
specifications are better focused on items such as average resource deployment times, resource
configuration requirements (e.g. VM’s with 16 cores), resource performance (e.g. network and
block storage IOPS), and functional characteristics such as fully API enabled access to all
capabilities.
Additionally, the FISMA security categorization of the applications to be hosted will be a key
requirement for defining the CSP’s that can be leveraged by contractors. Plan for proactive
management and processes to monitor CSP resource consumption by requiring reporting and
providing mechanisms for managing and periodically reviewing consumption. Contracting
flexibility can be provided by employing optional CLINs within appropriate resource categories
to accommodate future growth.
Building Cloud
Scenario:
● The mission area for your agency is acquisition services for the federal government.
● Management has asked you to move your largest line of business to the cloud.
● You are from a medium sized agency.
● Your agency has put a single business support application in the cloud last year.
● You worked for a cloud provider before joining your current agency
● Most agree, your CIO shop is stretched to capacity.
Additional Assumptions
● Some application re-engineering within this largest line of business application will be
required prior to migrating to cloud.
● Single acquisition.
Checklist
❏ Current application definition list.
❏ Application reconciliation contract or internal work plan.
❏ Organizational knowledge development plan.
❏ Post-migration application support strategy.
❏ Cost goals that reflect what is more expensive and what is less expensive when deploying
cloud services.
Key Questions
● What is the condition of your enterprise architecture blueprints? Are they good enough to
facilitate migration of the LOB apps to a CSP?
● Have you chosen a contracting approach?
● Have you decided what identity management approaches are acceptable and desirable?
● Do you have a comprehensive set of service level agreement requirements? Does it
include acceptable application performance metrics?
● Do you have a “consumption-to-cost” management and adjustment mechanism?
● Is governance in place?
● Have you decided on the most advantageous contract vehicle for your move to the cloud?
● Can you discuss your strategy for cloud sourcing? Do you have a roadmap?
● Are the stakeholders in all key areas at the same industry knowledge level for cloud?
Discussion
Application Preparation
With the target project consisting of your largest line of business, risk is elevated for your cloud
migration. Given the importance of the application you are taking the opportunity to modernize
your application to an appropriate extent to improve reliability and lower future maintenance
burdens by leveraging features of cloud computing. Ensuring current documentation, security
posture improvements, leveraging modern architecture and interface capabilities, and enhancing
testing and maintenance efficiency are just some of the outcomes of careful application
preparation.
However, this significant project will be building on at least some prior cloud experience and
therefore some network topology and systems integration concerns will have been included or at
least considered with the prior business support application migration. Contracting for IT
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 12
projects of this type always requires detailed and comprehensive system descriptions of the as-is
state and detailed objectives for the to-be state.
As an IT system inventory and assessment has been completed, we can trust that much of the as-
is documentation for this system/line-of-business has been completed and remains current.
Depending on the scope of that initial effort, it may even have outlined some modernization
paths for this application suite. In the more likely scenario that it did not, your current project
will need to anticipate some uncertainty in the implemented approach to its preparation for the
cloud. Given the assumption of a single acquisition, you’ll be asking vendors for an end-to-end
solution approach. This can result in sub-optimal outcomes if various vendors propose different
approaches to the project sections with no vendor proposing what might be the best approach for
each project section. Early contractor engagement during market research and especially the use
of RFI’s can be very valuable in providing input to framing the project and the solicitation to
ensure that the organization’s goals are met.
The to-be state after application refactoring must be consistent with existing agency enterprise
architecture, platform, and security standards. All of these documents will need to be referenced
in the solicitation. If exceptions to such standards have been made for this project, such as a
particular legacy system component to be replaced separately, those should be clearly noted as
well.
Multiple contracting approaches are possible with projects of this complexity that comprise
multiple phases. Separate CLINs can be created for each phase and these can further be broken
down within a phase. Hybrid contract types with optional CLINs mixing FFP and T&M (or just
Labor Hour) provide tremendous flexibility to ensure successful project execution within the
scope of the awarded contract.
Migration Support
It is a given that agency staff resources will be involved in the transition to the new cloud hosting
environment for this important line of business application. Very likely existing contractor
support resources for this application will also be utilized commensurate to their scope of
support. Nevertheless, you can anticipate needing transition related support activities including
project management for the planning, implementation, cutover, and legacy shutdown activities
for the application will be needed as well. The important theme for both your project and
especially the related solicitation is to be clear and thorough identifying the roles and
responsibilities of existing stakeholders and those to be undertaken by your new contractor.
CSP
The relative dollar value of the CSP hosting services in this scenario will typically result in
reduced attention to be given to this aspect of the project. The overall scope of the line of
business application being migrated may consist of many subsystems creating a large footprint of
VM’s, storage, and bandwidth consumed by the aggregated whole. This initial resource footprint
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 13
will be further multiplied when factoring in the various environment instances required for a full
development lifecycle such as for development, integration, QA, and production environments.
Compounding the contractor’s problem in pricing such services will be the phased approach of
the project and potential significant unknowns in the application modernization and preparation
phase that will impact resource consumption while seeking to maintain performance
characteristics.
Plan for proactive management of CSP resource consumption by requiring estimates and
providing mechanisms for managing and periodically reviewing consumption. Contracting
flexibility can be provided by employing optional CLINs within appropriate resource categories
to accommodate future growth.
As always, the FISMA security categorization will be essential in determining the available pool
of CSP’s that can be leveraged by contractors. Integration considerations for related applications
can impact hosting CSP selection for performance and manageability reasons based on where
those resources are hosted and the nature of the system interactions. Again, effective
comprehensive documentation of your existing IT system state will be key to contractor success
in their proposed solutions.
Refining Cloud
Scenario:
● You are in a medium sized – large agency (110,000).
● A significant portion of the agency infrastructure is already in the cloud.
● You will migrate all remaining on-premise cloud capable mission and mission-support
applications to another cloud provider.
● You are the most experienced deputy CIO with a mission area facing role.
● The agency has a national presence across the United States.
● Your COR functions are basic, meeting minimum requirements and focused on validating
payments. Service surveillance is compliant, minimal and mainly by exception.
Additional Assumptions
● IT system inventory is current and up-to-date.
● Where performance is not a critical requirement, the goal is to save money.
● 20% of your applications are not available.
Checklist
❏ Data rights and movement conditions are documented as a requirement.
❏ Documented support plan during migration.
❏ Are your administration rights, delegation and credential issuing plans sound?
❏ Post migration support and communications plan for mission area application users.
Key Questions
● Is your security breach and notification plan thorough, compliant and resilient?
● What are the changes you plan to make to disaster recovery and COOP plans?
● Will your service level definitions accommodate this delivery plan? How will you
maintain surveillance and balance competing requirements?
● You have a hosting and management strategy.
● Do you have a requirements definition that clearly defines duties of the provider relative
to duties of the government?
Discussion
Migration Support
The essence of this type of project scenario is getting applications out of the legacy on-premise
data center and to the cloud. As the application inventory is complete, the scope of cloud-ready
applications included in this migration effort should be well defined as are the major integration
and dependency hurdles, all of which can be provided in the solicitation to describe the as-is
Leveraging repeatable processes that are well integrated to agency configuration management
and governance processes will be a key driver for success since the overall scheduling of the
transition of individual applications can be become a quite complex challenge based on the
interdependencies between applications. These challenges may be further complicated by the
extended multi-CSP architecture in place. As the number of applications grows expanding the
project scope and likely manifesting interdependency driven scheduling challenges, the contract
structure may necessitate phased implementation approaches with multiple milestones breaking
the project into lower risk chunks. As always, the goal is to balance between execution flexibility
and effectively holding contractors accountable for meaningful performance in support of
mission.
Even though the targeted applications are cloud ready, security requirements for each application
will need to be considered as part of the migration to the cloud hosting environment. This can
include and may necessitate internal application component security analysis. Migration
activities to consider should include data preparation in addition to the interface and service
transition planning steps. Cutover planning combined with go-live support are key considerations
along with an appropriate back out or rollback planning must be anticipated and fully prepared
for when (not if) things go wrong.
CSP
This scenario represents a novel case where rather than justifying a particular CSP 4 be used for
hosting, a specific provider is not to be leveraged in order to specifically provide for vendor
diversity to enhance resiliency. The agency’s national presence does not itself necessitate a CSP
4
CSP justification is discussed within other Plays.
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 16
with particular attributes such as multiple regions for potentially more localized resource
deployment but does increase the likelihood that some application or application interaction
characteristics exist that may.
Consistent with all scenarios, it is important to provide the best available description of hosting
needs to ensure the workloads will function effectively and that the CSP supports any known
specialized performance characteristics. Standardized resource consumption estimates will
provide both an overall scope of effort to contractors and a potential path to price evaluation
within this component when needed. Appropriate CSP resource consumption metrics to specify
will vary by situation but can include overall numbers of, for example, VM’s with particular
RAM and vCPU cores, total required block storage, among other resources.
Do anticipate and plan for future expansion of required CSP capacity but also do not commit to
requirements beyond current needs. The goal is to build in flexibility for anticipated and
potential increases, and as appropriate decreases, in consumption based on reasonable
assumptions. Optional CLINs can be valuable tools to achieve this flexibility.
Tuning Cloud
Scenario:
● You are in a large agency (175,000).
● You have a rationalized and working cloud strategy that includes all cloud types.
● There is a single primary CSP and your contract ends in 21 months.
● Recent experience indicates a sensitive mission area requires very high service levels and
support responsiveness (Relative to the remainder of the enterprise).
Additional Assumptions
● The performance of the current CSP is marginally acceptable.
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 17
● The agency has an active, responsive and accurate enterprise architecture function.
● IT professional services support across the IT portfolio is in place and functioning well.
Checklist
❏ Documented lessons learned in the existing arrangement.
❏ Cost planning strategies.
❏ Data rights and movement conditions are documented as a requirement.
Key Questions
● What are the changes you plan to make to disaster recovery and COOP plans?
● What service levels do you need that are different from those in use?
● What requirements or contract weaknesses exist in the current arrangement that limit
achieving service that would delight you?
Discussion
CSP
Being this far along in the cloud journey, the only focus for the acquisition will be obtaining the
cloud services directly. A key question and concern at this point will be whether there are
requirements for a specific CSP based on the existing system landscape. Specifying a particular
CSP will typically require justification as part of the solicitation. The type of justification may
vary based on whether the CSP has multiple resellers (brand name) or if the CSP is directly
contracting with the Government (sole source). Conversely, in a case where cross provider
resiliency is required beyond regional workload distribution within the same CSP, it may be
necessary to specify your current providers as a way to exclude them from proposal within the
goals of the acquisition.
In the situation where the hosting requirements allow for more generic resources, competition
can be enhanced since a range of CSP solutions can be brought forward. A critical success
component will be describing the hosting needs sufficiently to be able to ensure the workloads
will function effectively and allow for an effective comparison between bids. Appropriate
metrics will vary of course by workload but it can be very helpful to describe the range by
percentage of, for example, VM’s by RAM or vCPU cores, and/or IOPS and throughput of
storage or networking performance. This can be important in obtaining effective cost estimates
when diverse workloads are aggregated from across many components and combined into a
single solicitation such as in this scenario. Also note that the particular capacity metrics utilized
can vary significantly across service models. SaaS solution metrics can often be based on
capabilities more closely aligned to the various application capabilities delivered and may not
include as many technical measurements.
Do anticipate and plan for future expansion of required CSP capacity but also do not commit to
requirements beyond current needs. The goal is to build in flexibility for anticipated and
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 18
potential increases, and even decreases, in consumption based on reasonable assumptions.
Optional CLINs can be valuable tools to achieve this flexibility.
Since the primary subject of this Playbook is cloud computing, solicitations that require CSP
solutions compliant with The NIST Definition of Cloud Computing will avoid solutions that are
only called cloud while ensuring your agency fully leverages its benefits. FISMA security
categorization for the hosted systems is a key constraint on the ability of the provider to meet
security requirements. There are far fewer FedRAMP High provisional authorizations than
FedRAMP Moderate. This constraint is even more impactful within DoD with their four separate
Impact Levels as defined in the Cloud Computing SRG. Consideration of whether to require
FedRAMP authorization at the time of solicitation will save time on deployment by lowering risk
of problems achieving security authorization in a timely manner but may create challenges if the
pool of capable providers is too small.
Differences will be found in contract vehicle access to CSP’s based on the service model,
especially for SaaS. Comprehensive IaaS providers that deliver a range of typical hosting
services including various sized VM’s, storage options, and flexible programmatic networking
capabilities, are typically well represented on vehicles. SaaS providers may not be generally
Commercial cloud service provider (CSP) offerings have been standardized to efficiently support
high volume consumption and perceived near-infinite scaling capabilities in a multi-tenant
environment. This standardization typically means the agency consumer will need to have
additional services layered on top of the direct CSP service to match their individual
requirements. These additional services can be provided either by agency staff or by contracting
for professional services. A common example exists in Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)
offerings such as a virtual machine service. Although IaaS CSP’s will provide the agency
consumer with a fully tested and patched OS image to launch the virtual server, once that virtual
machine is launched and running, the CSP is not responsible for installing application software,
applying future OS patches, monitoring that the server is performing the task intended (e.g.
It is a key procurement and risk management consideration to plan for these services in the cloud
space. Does your agency have in-house expertise to provide these services or are they currently
contracted to a system integrator? Although they can easily be obtained and contracted with the
IaaS hosting services by system integrators or other contractors, tradeoffs must considered in
contracting convenience versus flexibility and managing vendor lock-in risk by separating the
contracting efforts.
This metered facet of cloud computing billing and realizing the cost benefits conveyed by buying
only the amount required has caused confusion and concern in the government contracting
community. The challenge contains aspects of both contracting specifics and government
financial business processes. This form of billing is widely used in the private sector but is not
common among government customers. Consumption based billing is burdensome in terms of
the management required to budget, obligate and monitor billing.
How shall a contract be crafted when the method of billing calls for a time & materials (T&M)
contract type if an agency discourages the use of T&M contracts because of the risks to the
government? There are risks of running out of funding and violating the Antideficiency Act,
especially for a service that can be provisioned so easily. Thus far, most agencies’ innovations
with respect to procuring cloud computing services have relied upon flexibilities already existing
within the FAR. Agencies are using three approaches for paying for cloud computing services
today, including:
For Approaches 1 and 2, Agencies have been crafting a contract with a Firm Fixed Price (FFP)
per unit of sale and then monitoring the burn rate similar to a T&M contract to manage the risk
of runaway cloud services and labor exceeding funding and possibly violating of the
Antideficiency Act. Similar risk exists in having to de-obligate excess funding near the end of
the fiscal year. Agencies must have the contract management governance in place to monitor
cloud services contracts. Many CSPs offer tools that will alert agencies when a specific threshold
of spent funds has been reached to help mitigate this situation.
Another option available from cloud service providers (CSPs) is offering cloud services by
subscription. For Approach 3, rather than paying by the individual item, a CSP might offer a
bundle of cloud computing services for a fixed monthly price that the agency must commit to
using for a defined period. The agency then receives a known quantity of cloud services for a
known price for many months, or even a year. The agency then remains somewhat at risk since
the subscription cloud services are provided on a “use or lose” basis where the agency might pay
for unused computing power that it has committed to via subscription. In this case, the agency
forfeits one of the advantages of cloud computing - its potential for saving money during periods
of low consumption. The other advantages of cloud computing, such as agility, etc., are not
affected by the subscription billing model.
Each of these current approaches is described below along with an explanation of their detractors
and why they are preventing the government from acquiring cloud services.
Pros: Most common method for funding cloud and is the traditional method on contracting for
IT services.
Cons: Unable to ramp services up and down based on usage. There is not full realization of the
benefits of elasticity of cloud in terms of cost savings.
The government engages with the vendor to estimate what the government is going to use. The
government agrees to terms with the vendor such as $50 million over 5 years, which comes to
$10 million per year. The government obligates the initial $10 million annual amount. Each
month there is a bill and the money is taken from the fund to pay it. There is a drawdown against
that account. The remaining funds are monitored for burn rate. If the remaining funds get low,
the agency requests additional funds from the CFO that can be obligated to maintain services.
The vendor is obligated a lump sum of money for work to be completed. The vendor keeps track
of burn rate and value. There is a drawdown against that account. Once the burn hits a
prearranged level such as 70%, the vendor notifies the government and estimates how long 30%
remaining will last. The government gets additional funding obligated to “recharge the debit
card” and work proceeds.
Drawdown accounts are just another name for process steps that necessarily occur when the
government contracts for goods and services. In the end, this is a “solution” in name only.
Pros: Allows customers to realize elasticity and flexibility benefits of cloud services.
Cons: Burdensome bookkeeping and effort for either the CO or the vendor as usage can be
unpredictable.
Pros: This option works well if the hosting options are consistent throughout the life of the
contract. There is low risk, a certainty of forecasted utilization, and is relatively simple to
execute.
Cons: Government will typically add a buffer which ends up leaving money on the table. The
CO obligates $100k per month for what should be $60k. This method nullifies the purpose of
cloud allowing payment for what is actually consumed.
Conclusion
The Federal government’s existing methods of buying cloud services (e.g., optional CLINs,
drawdown accounts, and subscription models) do not effectively address the problem of demand
elasticity and portability. They are ultimately minor variants in contracting structure, business
financial process emphasis, or product re-characterizations that help only incrementally by
shifting trade-offs without providing complete solutions. None of these methods provide for a
complete realization of benefits of cloud computing by providing effective means for the
government to both consume and pay only for the resources it needs and uses. A potential
solution to this might explicitly allow for cloud computing resource units to be treated, including
associated oversight risk, like labor hour rates (fixed unit price) in T&M contracts.
In the case of 3rd party cloud service providers (CSPs,) there is a program offered by GSA where
CSPs may receive an ATO which may be leveraged by an agency and be included in an agency’s
overall ATO package. That program is called the FedRAMP program.
Under the FedRAMP program, CSPs apply to have their system security provisions scrutinized
by an approved FedRAMP consultant, known as a certified Third Party Assessment Organization
(3PAO). The CSP then receives an ATO which can be leveraged by agencies and included in
their own overall ATOs.
It is important to note that each FedRAMP ATO covers only a particular cloud service offering
of the CSP of which they may have several. CSP’s with several cloud service offerings will have
separate FedRAMP ATO’s for each. The scope of each ATO is defined by the security boundary
established within the particular solution covered and importantly may not cover all services
marketed by the CSP as being part of the offering. Agency use of any services outside of the
scope of the leveraged ATO will require their security evaluation and assumption of the
associated additional risk. Some vendors may have both an IaaS and potentially several SaaS
offerings and may leverage their IaaS solution and its ATO for their SaaS offering but that may
and need not be the case. These scenarios indicate a required vigilance for security on the part of
consuming organizations to the services and solutions deployed
Data in Clouds
Residency
When acquiring cloud computing solutions, another important factor to consider is the physical
location of the where the data resides. Though the data resides in the “cloud,” an agency may
still have requirements (legal, regulatory, or architectural) or preferences about where the data is
located that should be specified to the CSP during the negotiation of the purchase. For example,
5
https://s3.amazonaws.com/sitesusa/wp-
content/uploads/sites/482/2015/03/FedRAMP_Standard_Contractual_Clauses_062712_0.pdf
6
“Creating Effective Cloud Computing Contracts for the Federal Government.” February 2012. https://cio.gov/wp-
content/uploads/downloads/2012/09/cloudbestpractices.pdf
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 25
a critical requirement for some agencies is that the data reside in the contiguous U.S. (CONUS)
and not be routed through or stored on infrastructure outside of the contiguous U.S. (OCONUS),
as can happen when selecting a CSP with global infrastructure. Whatever the requirement may
be, it should be clearly communicated with the CSP and written into the contract to ensure all
obligations are met.
Greater detail on data ownership and rights pertaining to termination of service, breaches, and
information and records management can be found in the CIO Council report. 8
Many agencies use a SOO which states the agency goals in a most general sense, allowing
vendors more creativity in proposing a solution. For instance, instead of naming the number and
7
“Creating Effective Cloud Computing Contracts for the Federal Government.” February 2012. https://cio.gov/wp-
content/uploads/downloads/2012/09/cloudbestpractices.pdf
8
Ibid.
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 26
type of processors needed, the amount of memory and storage, etc., only the projected usage
statistics of an application are named. Usage statistics such as the number of visits to a website
per day, the average page size, the average number of pages viewed per visit, etc., would help
make up a SOO.
For cloud computing, requirements documents (e.g., SOO) are generally inserted into a Request
for Quotation (RFQ) or a Request for Proposal (RFP) as appropriate. Generally, an RFQ is used
when the path to the IT solution is known and specific pricing is sought for specific cloud
services. An RFP would be used when the path is not quite known and the agency is looking for
vendor input, a proposal, to craft a solution from the ground up. An RFP is also used when there
is a large labor hour component, to encourage vendors to give some input on how the labor might
be used, and what skill sets would be required. Pricing is not normally delivered in a vendor
response to an RFI.
Therefore, in general for cloud computing, a good combination of all of the above might be an
SOO issued within an RFQ. That way, the vendor responses will be creative yet contain specific
pricing. If the agency wishes simply to establish an agency “gift card” type of drawdown account
funding attached to a cloud service provider (CSP) then this may be an optimum solution. CSPs
may respond with their full price list of available services, which the agency can pick and choose
from at the Task Order level.
The final selection of the SOO/SOW/PWS and RFQ/RFP is authorized by the ordering
contracting officer. It is important for the IT shop or program office to engage with their
contracting officer early in the process because decisions like these need to be made all along
way in this process.
The recommended perspective to make this judgement is to consider the service models required
and then selected and specific subcategories of those service models. Consider Iaas and PaaS
together, and SaaS on its own. The two categories to consider under IaaS-PaaS are whether IT
professional services are needed. For SaaS, consider the subcategories as seats and usage, but IT
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 27
professional services are still an important consideration depending on the service. This sets up a
framework for an appropriate discussion of cloud service models and contract types.
Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) and Platform as a Service (PaaS) are close approximations of
replacements for traditional servers housed in an agency’s data center. In a subscription based
model a fixed amount of computing services are bundled together and the agency is charged
monthly. For agencies procuring IaaS and PaaS without professional services, a FFP should be
used as contract risk should be relatively low, defined within acceptable limits, and the vendors
and agency reasonably agree on price. This does not come without risk as agencies can be
charged for services aren’t used or are charged more than expected (both scenarios do not take
advantage of costs savings promised by a cloud solution). In cases where agencies require
support services, they should consider a Time and Materials (T&M) separate from the IaaS and
PaaS FFP and identify their needs in the Contract Line Item (CLIN). Agencies can avoid these
risks by writing in broad CLINs that provides the customer flexibility a broader scope and would
alleviate Government concerns around exceeding categorized line items within a contract.
Software as a Service (SaaS) offerings vary from IaaS and PaaS in that vendors charge for based
on active users or seat licenses that are permitted to access the service. SaaS seats may be scaled
up or down each month in keeping with the metered billing model for use in a T&M or FFP
contract. To take advantage of the SaaS cost savings, a T&M contract type should be used to pay
for usage. Most SaaS offerings include monitoring capabilities built into the service. Agencies
can take advantage of the automation tools to help provision, control access, and provide cloud
monitoring and reporting. It may be difficult to get agency contracting officer buy in as it is not
the traditional way of procuring IT services. If an agency selects a FFP contract type for a SaaS
procurement, allow for the flexibility at the CLIN or task order level so cost savings can be
realized.
In summary, T&M is the appropriate contract type for IaaS-PaaS if labor is required; otherwise,
FFP is more advantageous. For SaaS, T&M is useful in all cases including seats and usage, but
FFP should be limited to seat oriented contracts.
Similar to considering how and where professional services will be required as part of a cloud
adoption strategy, cloud application architecture provides additional options to enhance
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 28
enterprise agility in contracting for cloud IT services. Opportunities can exist, or can be created
through planning via enterprise architecture efforts within a cloud strategy, to strategically
segregate the hosting and contracting of major components of IT systems. For example, a SaaS
presentation layer might be separately hosted from the data store undergirding the system. This
would allow a potentially less complicated and less risky migration of a support contract from an
underperforming vendor to a new contractor. Agencies could consider this multiple cloud
strategy across other applications as well using a Cloud of Clouds approach allowing for a
combined public and private cloud environment as well as services and platforms from a diverse
set of independent software vendors working harmoniously in this secure environment.
Government has struggled with moving the critical mass of Government IT to the cloud, leaving
most of the Federal legacy IT systems intact and agencies remain faced with the ever-challenging
task of overhauling legacy systems to cloud. A consideration would be to strategically move all
IT infrastructure to a Contractor Owned/Contractor Operated model with a transition strategy to
move all cloud enabled applications to the cloud immediately. Then, in a phased approach, begin
the project of migrating legacy systems to the cloud in a manageable timeline.
BPAs provide for convenience, efficiency, and reduced costs as well as a simplified ordering
process. Multiple agencies can band together to place orders for similar requirements. There is
much less overhead relative to all agencies and agencies can increase their purchasing power to
get volume discounts. BPAs offer shorter acquisition lead times and agencies can reuse or
leverage requirements other agencies have already developed. BPAs are not synopsized as part
of the use process. A BPA can be established with one Schedule contractor or multiple
contractors in accordance with FAR 8.405-3, referred to as Single-Award BPA or Multiple-
Award BPA. The preference (established through 8.405-3) is for multiple-award BPAs and
The DHS Enterprise Computing Services (ECS) BPA is a prime example for using a BPA. ECS
provides Cloud Hosting Services for the agencies under DHS and allows for terms and
conditions to be set at the contract level such as any solution offered on the BPA must be
FedRAMP authorized. Agencies can leverage the contract for recurring requirements under
separate tasks that provide DHS an opportunity for leveraging further discounts at the task order
level.
Another good example of the use of a federal-wide, multiple awards BPA is the Email as a
Service IT-70 BPA. The BPA(s) were awarded to 14 companies and provided email,
collaboration, records management, integration, and migration services. It had distinct
requirements across each of the solutions that were uniform in nature and fit the definition of
“recurring needs for goods and services with those contractors who have qualified sources of
supply” such as the email as a service offering allowed for 4 solutions - Google, Microsoft
Exchange, and Zimbra . With the terms and conditions and discounted pricing set at the BPA
level, tasks orders were streamlined and allowed for even lower negotiated pricing at that level.
BPAs can apply across a host of opportunities and should be considered as a viable procurement
strategy. For example, Army ACCENT had many characteristics that fit a BPA procurement
strategy such as recurring transition requirements. Army wanted a standard tool that preset all the
base requirements for their estimated 10,000 applications that are to be migrated to the cloud.
The contract requirements included Infrastructure as a Service, Software as a Service, and
Platform as a Service offerings and had offerors demonstrate a DISA issued Provisional
Authority for award. It further included in scope all the IT professional services needed to fully
support and execute the transition and migration of these applications. Although ACCENT was
not itself executed as a BPA, it is an excellent example of a use case for a cloud BPA that
includes migration services in contrast to the DHS ECS BPA which is limited to CSP services.
When establishing a BPA, the ordering activity must address the frequency of ordering,
invoicing, discounts, requirements (e.g., estimated quantities, work to be performed), delivery
locations and time. For information on establishing a BPA, please refer to
https://www.gsa.gov/portal/content/199393.
Competition Requirements
All cloud services must be capable of meeting FedRAMP cloud security requirements with the
necessary contract language available on the FedRAMP website. It is important to note that
current Federal (but not DoD 9) policy does not require the cloud service offering to already have
9
DoD-originated acquisitions require any Cloud Service Offering (CSO) to already possess a Provisional Authority
(PA) at the appropriate Impact Level per DFARS Subpart 239.7602-1(b)(1)
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 30
a FedRAMP authorization at the time of award. The standard contracting language requires
rather that the vendor be able to comply with the FedRAMP standards. However, in the interest
of speed to deployment of the cloud services, an agency may require that the CSP already
possess a FedRAMP authorization. For this requirement to withstand protest and meet fair
opportunity requirements there must be a sufficient number of contractors capable of meeting the
overall contract requirements.
Requirements Contracts
Requirements contracts are rare within IT services but hold promise as a solution to manage the
variable consumption aspects of cloud computing. They have the benefit of being available
options for both open market and contract vehicle based acquisitions (i.e. Alliant 2) although
there is an education gap within the acquisition workforce. As described in the Alliant 2 RFP 10:
A Requirements contract type (FAR Subpart 16.503 11) actual purchase requirements of
designated Government activities for deliveries to be scheduled by placing orders with
the Contractor. The provides for filling all services or supplies during a specified contract
period, with performance or contracting officer states a realistic estimated total quantity
in the Task Order solicitation and the resulting order. All Requirements contract type
CLINS within a Task Order must include a defined scope with all items priced at time of
award, i.e., Fixed-priced by unit/rate, size or type as defined by the issuing agency.
Established pricing is not subject to any adjustment on the basis of the contractor’s cost
experience in performing the Task Order, and established Contractor prices will not be
subsequently discounted at the Government’s request once negotiated at Task Order
award. The agency will direct the Contractor to deliver a specified quantity of the in-
scope Government requirement by use of a Call, which activates a pre-priced CLIN or
SubCLIN during the term of the Task Order.
A Requirements contract type Task Order may be appropriate for acquiring flexible IT
solution services, including ancillary services or goods when the Government anticipates
recurring requirements but cannot predetermine the precise quantities that Government
activities will need during a definite period.
No individual instances of requirements contracts for cloud computing services have been
identified yet. This section will be updated as more information on specific examples and lessons
learned associated are obtained.
10
https://www.fbo.gov/notices/ae1b53bc5499c3b3f40358ba3281d525
11
http://farsite.hill.af mil/reghtml/regs/far2afmcfars/fardfars/far/16.htm#P404_67621
Cloud Computing Acquisition Playbook 31
From: David Bray
To: kevin [email protected]
Subject: FW: Files for the CCOE
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 5:39:00 PM
Attachments: CloudComputeAcqPlaybook Final v4.0.docx
Hi All.
Tomorrow, March 23rd, is the day we were hoping to hear from you regarding the
Playbook.
I have attached a copy to this e-mail to make locating it more convenient. Please feel
free to turn on Track Changes and make your comments.
Thank you for the consideration.
/vr/
On Fri, Mar 17, 2017 at 12:32 PM, Kermit McKelvy - QT3GA <[email protected]>
wrote:
Hi All. Thank you for your attention and questions on the Playbook in our meeting
yesterday.
As a follow up, we would really appreciate it if you would provide feedback on the
document (See attached to original message. Disregard yellow highlights).
Comments beyond grammar are especially appreciated. We are happy to hear about
your Playbook ideas beyond this document as well. Please use Tracked Changes to
make your comments and edits.
Can we get your feedback by Thursday, March 23rd?
Again, thanks for your help to date. We will keep you posted regarding our progress.
/vr/
On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 3:09 PM, Kim Pack - QTGBC-C <[email protected]>
wrote:
Attached are files we will be using for the CCOE.
Kimberly Pack
Wolf Den Associates
Mobile: (571) 318-0328
In support of the:
GSA Federal Acquisition Service (FAS)
Customer Engagement and Solutions Development Division
1800 F Street
Washington, DC
From: Christine Calvosa
To: [email protected]
Cc: Stephanie Kost
Subject: FOIA 2017 - 000603 - Brodkin - Expedited Processing Request
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 6:10:55 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000603 (Brodkin) - Expedited Processing Decision.pdf
“Teamwork – Coming together is a beginning; keeping together is progress; working together is success!” Henry Ford
Federal Communications Commission
Washington, D.C. 20554
Jonathan Brodkin
Ars Technica
(b) (6)
Mr. Brodkin:
This letter responds to your request for expedited processing of your Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) request seeking documents related to e-mails, and other communications and
records related to the downtime experienced by the FCC's Electronic Comment Filing System
on May 7 and 8, 2017. Your request has been assigned FOIA Control No. FCC-2017-
000603.
We grant your request for expedited processing. We will commence the search for records
responsive to your request and anticipate responding to you as soon as possible.
Sincerely,
Christine Calvosa
DCIO T&R
From: Christine Calvosa
To: [email protected]
Cc: Stephanie Kost
Subject: FOIA 2017 - 000610 - Romm - Expedited Processing Request
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 6:14:24 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000610 (Romm) - Expedited Processing Decision.pdf
“Teamwork – Coming together is a beginning; keeping together is progress; working together is success!” Henry Ford
Federal Communications Commission
Washington, D.C. 20554
Tony Romm
Recode
(
b
)
Via e-mail( to [email protected]
Re: FOIA Control No. FCC-2017-000610
Mr. Romm:
This letter responds to your request for expedited processing of your Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) request seeking documents related to all records related to the suspected cyber
attack targeting the FCC and its comment system. Your request has been assigned FOIA
Control No. FCC-2017-000610.
We grant your request for expedited processing. We will commence the search for records
responsive to your request and anticipate responding to you as soon as possible.
Sincerely,
Christine Calvosa
DCIO T&R
From: Christine Calvosa
To: (b) (6)
Cc: Stephanie Kost
Subject: FOIA 2017 - 000612 - Sullivan - Expedited Processing Request
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 6:16:19 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000612 (Sullivan) - Expedited Processing Decision.pdf
“Teamwork – Coming together is a beginning; keeping together is progress; working together is success!” Henry Ford
Federal Communications Commission
Washington, D.C. 20554
Brian Sullivan
(b) (6)
Mr. Sullivan:
This letter responds to your request for expedited processing of your Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) request seeking documents related to server logs of comment section regarding
DDoS attacks. Your request has been assigned FOIA Control No. FCC-2017-000612.
You may seek review of the denial of your request for expedited processing by filing an
application for review with the Office of General Counsel within five (5) working days of the
date of this letter. See 47 C.F.R. § 0.461(h)(4)(ii).
While we deny your request for expedited processing, we will nonetheless commence the
search for records responsive to your request and anticipate responding to you as soon as
possible.
Sincerely,
Christine Calvosa
DCIO T&R
From: Christine Calvosa
To: [email protected]
Cc: Stephanie Kost
Subject: FOIA 2017- 000628 - Brustein - Expedited Processing Request
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 6:18:58 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000628 (Brustein) - Expedited Processing Decision.pdf
“Teamwork – Coming together is a beginning; keeping together is progress; working together is success!” Henry Ford
Federal Communications Commission
Washington, D.C. 20554
Joshua Brustein
Bloomberg News
731 Lexington Ave
New York, NY 10022
Via e-mail to [email protected]
Re: FOIA Control No. FCC-2017-000628
Mr. Brustein:
This letter responds to your request for expedited processing of your Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) request of May 15, 2017, seeking documents related to “all records related to the
DDoS attack”. Your request has been assigned FOIA Control No. FCC-2017-000628.
We grant your request for expedited processing. We will commence the search for records
responsive to your request and anticipate responding to you as soon as possible.
Sincerely,
Christine Calvosa
DCIO T&R
From: John Skudlarek
To: Kevin Baker
Subject: Fwd: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
Date: Thursday, May 18, 2017 10:46:19 AM
Attachments: FOIA 2017- 000628 - Brustein - Expedited Processing Request.msg
FOIA 2017- 000615 - Boyle - Expedited Processing Request.msg
FOIA 2017 - 000612 - Sullivan - Expedited Processing Request.msg
FOIA 2017 - 000610 - Romm - Expedited Processing Request.msg
FOIA 2017-000605 - Arsenault - Expedited Processing Request.msg
FOIA 2017 - 000603 - Brodkin - Expedited Processing Request.msg
FYI
John P. Skudlarek
Deputy CIO
FCC
All,
Attached are all the emails/letters sent to the six people below.
Thank you,
Christine
From: Christine Calvosa
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 6:05 PM
To: Stephanie Kost <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>;
David Bray <[email protected]>; Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Stephanie Kost
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 3:17 PM
To: Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>;
David Bray <[email protected]>; Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 3:07 PM
To: Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Stephanie Kost
<[email protected]>
Subject: FW: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Deborah Klein
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 2:52 PM
To: Kevin Baker <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Stephanie Kost
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:29 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Deborah Klein
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Kevin Baker <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 12:15 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
Kevin P. Baker
Associate CIO, Planning and Performance
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th St, SW
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-2023
From: Christine Calvosa
To: (b) (6)
Cc: Stephanie Kost
Subject: FOIA 2017- 000615 - Boyle - Expedited Processing Request
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 6:17:36 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000615 (Boyle) - Expedited Processing Decision.pdf
“Teamwork – Coming together is a beginning; keeping together is progress; working together is success!” Henry Ford
Federal Communications Commission
Washington, D.C. 20554
Brendan J. Boyle
(
b
)
(
Via e-mail to (b) (6)
Re: FOIA Control No. FCC-2017-000615
Mr. Boyle:
This letter responds to your request for expedited processing of your Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) request seeking documents related to all records related to the Distributed Denial
of Service attack on FCC's ECFS. Your request has been assigned FOIA Control No. FCC-
2017-000615.
We are unable to grant your request for expedited processing. We will commence the search
for records responsive to your request and anticipate responding to you as soon as possible.
Sincerely,
Christine Calvosa
DCIO T&R
From: Christine Calvosa
To: (b) (6)
Cc: Stephanie Kost
Subject: FOIA 2017-000605 - Arsenault - Expedited Processing Request
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 6:12:47 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000605 (Arsenault) - Expedited Processing Decision.pdf
“Teamwork – Coming together is a beginning; keeping together is progress; working together is success!” Henry Ford
Federal Communications Commission
Washington, D.C. 20554
Chad Arsenault
(b) (6)
Mr. Arsenault:
This letter responds to your request for expedited processing of your Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) request seeking documents related to detailed web server access logs of fcc.gov
and its filings section (https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings) between the hours of
12:00AM (00:00) May 07, 2017 and 12:00AM (00:00) May 08, 2017. Your request has been
assigned FOIA Control No. FCC-2017-000605.
You may seek review of the denial of your request for expedited processing by filing an
application for review with the Office of General Counsel within five (5) working days of the
date of this letter. See 47 C.F.R. § 0.461(h)(4)(ii).
While we deny your request for expedited processing, we will nonetheless commence the
search for records responsive to your request and anticipate responding to you as soon as
possible.
Sincerely,
Christine Calvosa
DCIO T&R
From: Kevin Baker
To: John Skudlarek
Subject: Fwd: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
Date: Thursday, May 18, 2017 6:59:33 AM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000605 (Arsenault) - Expedited Processing Decision (RJY Edits....doc
FOIA 2017-000612 (Sullivan) - Expedited Processing Decision (RJY Edits)....doc
FOIA 2017-000603 (Brodkin) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000610 (Romm) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000615 (Boyle) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000628 (Brustein) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Deborah Klein
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 2:52 PM
To: Kevin Baker <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Stephanie Kost
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:29 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Deborah Klein
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Kevin Baker <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 12:15 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Kevin P. Baker
Associate CIO, Planning and Performance
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th St, SW
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-2023
From: Christine Calvosa
To: Stephanie Kost; Vanessa Lamb
Cc: John Skudlarek; Tony Summerlin (CTR); David Bray; Deborah Klein
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 6:20:07 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017- 000628 - Brustein - Expedited Processing Request.msg
FOIA 2017- 000615 - Boyle - Expedited Processing Request.msg
FOIA 2017 - 000612 - Sullivan - Expedited Processing Request.msg
FOIA 2017 - 000610 - Romm - Expedited Processing Request.msg
FOIA 2017-000605 - Arsenault - Expedited Processing Request.msg
FOIA 2017 - 000603 - Brodkin - Expedited Processing Request.msg
All,
Attached are all the emails/letters sent to the six people below.
Thank you,
Christine
From: Christine Calvosa
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 6:05 PM
To: Stephanie Kost <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>;
David Bray <[email protected]>; Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Stephanie Kost
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 3:17 PM
To: Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>;
David Bray <[email protected]>; Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 3:07 PM
To: Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Stephanie Kost
<[email protected]>
Subject: FW: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Deborah Klein
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 2:52 PM
To: Kevin Baker <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Stephanie Kost
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:29 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Deborah Klein
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Kevin Baker <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 12:15 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
Kevin P. Baker
Associate CIO, Planning and Performance
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th St, SW
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-2023
From: Stephanie Kost
To: Christine Calvosa
Cc: John Skudlarek; Tony Summerlin (CTR); David Bray; Deborah Klein
Subject: FW: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 3:17:02 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000605 (Arsenault) - Expedited Processing Decision (RJY Edits....doc
FOIA 2017-000612 (Sullivan) - Expedited Processing Decision (RJY Edits)....doc
FOIA 2017-000603 (Brodkin) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000610 (Romm) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000615 (Boyle) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000628 (Brustein) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 3:07 PM
To: Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Stephanie Kost
<[email protected]>
Subject: FW: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Deborah Klein
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 2:52 PM
To: Kevin Baker <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Stephanie Kost
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:29 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Deborah Klein
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Kevin Baker <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 12:15 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Kevin P. Baker
Associate CIO, Planning and Performance
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th St, SW
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-2023
From: Kevin Baker
To: Christine Calvosa
Cc: John Skudlarek; Christine Calvosa; Tony Summerlin (CTR); David Bray; Stephanie Kost
Subject: FW: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 3:07:30 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000605 (Arsenault) - Expedited Processing Decision (RJY Edits....doc
FOIA 2017-000612 (Sullivan) - Expedited Processing Decision (RJY Edits)....doc
FOIA 2017-000603 (Brodkin) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000610 (Romm) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000615 (Boyle) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000628 (Brustein) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
(b) (5)
From: Deborah Klein
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 2:52 PM
To: Kevin Baker <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Stephanie Kost
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:29 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Deborah Klein
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Kevin Baker <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 12:15 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
Kevin P. Baker
Associate CIO, Planning and Performance
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th St, SW
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-2023
From: Deborah Klein
To: Kevin Baker
Cc: John Skudlarek; Christine Calvosa; Tony Summerlin (CTR); David Bray; Stephanie Kost
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 2:51:49 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000605 (Arsenault) - Expedited Processing Decision (RJY Edits....doc
FOIA 2017-000612 (Sullivan) - Expedited Processing Decision (RJY Edits)....doc
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:29 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Deborah Klein
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Kevin Baker <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
From: Kevin Baker
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 12:15 PM
To: Deborah Klein <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Tony
Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
(b) (5)
Kevin P. Baker
Associate CIO, Planning and Performance
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th St, SW
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-2023
From: Kevin Baker
To: Deborah Klein
Cc: John Skudlarek; Christine Calvosa; Tony Summerlin (CTR); David Bray
Subject: RE: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 1:29:16 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000612 (Sullivan) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000605 (Arsenault) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Kevin P. Baker
Associate CIO, Planning and Performance
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th St, SW
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-2023
From: Kevin Baker
To: Deborah Klein
Cc: John Skudlarek; Christine Calvosa; Tony Summerlin (CTR); David Bray
Subject: FOIA Expedited Processing requests
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 12:14:54 PM
Attachments: FOIA 2017-000603 (Brodkin) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000605 (Arsenault) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000610 (Romm) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000612 (Sullivan) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000615 (Boyle) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
FOIA 2017-000628 (Brustein) - Expedited Processing Decision.doc
(b) (5)
Kevin P. Baker
Associate CIO, Planning and Performance
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th St, SW
Washington, DC 20554
Office: (202) 418-2023
From: David Bray
To: Shaun Waterman (FedScoop News)
Subject: Re: Following up from Friday
Date: Friday, May 19, 2017 5:54:55 PM
Many thanks Shaun, I thought they did report to you. I will follow-up with Greg.
More importantly, wishing you a wonderful weekend ahead; with highest regards,
-d.
David: I understand your frustration, but none of these guys report to me and I'm not in
charge.
I spoke with Greg this morning and he said he would speak to you ... I think that's your best
bet. Neither of us would benefit from me trying to get more involved
Shaun
Shaun Waterman
Contributing editor
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
202-841-9017
@WatermanReports
[email protected]
www.LinkedIn.com/in/shaunwaterman
On Fri, May 19, 2017 at 12:18 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Shaun,
Hope you are doing well. Here is a good article that does get the technical facts correct on
what happened; I wish FedScoop or CyberScoop had also been able to follow-up after we
did take 30 minutes to chat last Friday -- not sure why they did not?
http://www.zdnet.com/article/cio-diary-lessons-from-the-fcc-bot-swarm/
It was misleading to us because Billy had requested the verbal discussion to improve and
clarify the article and it seems like no action has been done?
We appreciate her folks are passionate about the 17-108 proceeding, however is it possible
that unconscious biases about the issue crept into the article that was written and prevent
correcting now?
Thank you.
I'm sorry David, I thinks it's best all around if I stay out of this
Shaun Waterman
FedScoop News
202 841 9017
[email protected]
Sent from a handheld wireless device and typed with thumbs. Please excuse any consequent
typos, contractions or impolite brevity.
Hi Shaun,
Happy Tuesday to you – would you have a chance to discuss this sometime (see below). I’m at
(b) (6)
Many thanks,
-d.
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 15, 2017 10:04 PM
To: Billy Mitchell <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]; 'Goldy Kamali' <[email protected]>
Subject: Following up from Friday
Hope you both are doing well. Is there going to be a follow-up from our discussion on
Friday w/ Billy?
For Chris' article, I am concerned that the 'cyber expert' referenced was someone looking
solely on the DarkWeb -- when nowhere in the definition of a DDoS does it say it has to
originate from the DarkWeb. That was misleading to the audience and it would have been
good to question the expert if a DDoS has to originate from infected bots -- it does not.
Also, claiming that our definition differs from other experts was also misleading as what I
shared with you was a definition outside of our agency -- from the top search result if you
ask Google "What is DDoS"? That should be corrected. http://www.digitalattackmap.
com/understanding-ddos/
As mentioned, the Pokemon Go DDoS attack is the best analogy for what happened here -
- in this case using commercial cloud services which made it even harder to address real
comment bots vs. bots just throwing junk data at us.
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/gaming/pokemon-go-down-
servers-ddos-attack-hackers-poodlecorp-game-unavailable-a7140811.html
https://techcrunch.com/2016/07/17/ourmine-attacks-pokemon-go-servers/
Finally, even Brian Krebs when he had his massive DDoS directed at him refrained from
releasing the logs. Off the record we've chatted with him since these events. As discussed
with Billy on Friday, there's way too much private information that folks did not give
permission to FCC to release as well as operationally sensitive info there -- we're not
alone in that position as almost every CIO or CISO would have the same concerns. Off the
record, certain groups have sent tweets that show they're (1) using bots, and (2) that
they're searching for vulnerabilities:
This is an example of a group using bots to submit comments via the API (vs. having
humans go to the website directly) -- and what they're finding is there is a rate limit for
the API as mentioned to Billy on Friday: https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/
861962863245742084
And this is an example of the group either sending junk data to the API or doing recon on
the system to find potential exploits. This was on Thursday, when no one else had issues
and in fact it was the highest day on record ever for the FCC at more than 400,000
comments: https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/862714335075893250
Per one of our internal experts that looked at the screenshot that group sent:
From: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 09:12
To: David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Byron Caswell (CTR); Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Subject: RE: Non urgent curiosity
David,
What I can’t tell you is what they did to trigger it. It could be he was throwing junk
data, or trying to find vulnerabilities. That could be why he hit the HTTP 500, when no one else
has and it seems to be working properly. Either that or there is something else “unique” about
what he is submitting that would allow him to throw this error.
-d.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:08 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Update, I see Billy’s tied-up, understand and will stand by. Many thanks.
Now is good.
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:06 PM
To: Billy Mitchell <[email protected]>; David Bray
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Dr. Bray
Sorry Mark,
Billy, are you available to talk to Dr. Bray? He is around right now if
you’re available.
Mark
202-418-0253
From: [email protected]
To: Shaun Waterman (FedScoop News)
Subject: Re: Following up from Friday
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 12:57:05 PM
Hi Shaun - as indicated, we are concerned that a less than balanced article was released. We
sent additional details and then we even made time for an in-person interview on Friday with
Billy and there has still be no follow-up. At the time on Friday it did not appear that Billy had
any disagreements with what we raised and the door was open for him to indicate what parts
he wanted to have on the record?
It was misleading to us because Billy had requested the verbal discussion to improve and
clarify the article and it seems like no action has been done?
We appreciate her folks are passionate about the 17-108 proceeding, however is it possible
that unconscious biases about the issue crept into the article that was written and prevent
correcting now?
Thank you.
I'm sorry David, I thinks it's best all around if I stay out of this
Shaun Waterman
FedScoop News
202 841 9017
[email protected]
Sent from a handheld wireless device and typed with thumbs. Please excuse any consequent
typos, contractions or impolite brevity.
Hi Shaun,
Happy Tuesday to you – would you have a chance to discuss this sometime (see below). I’m at
(b) (6)
Many thanks,
-d.
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 15, 2017 10:04 PM
To: Billy Mitchell <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]; 'Goldy Kamali' <[email protected]>
Subject: Following up from Friday
Hope you both are doing well. Is there going to be a follow-up from our discussion on Friday
w/ Billy?
For Chris' article, I am concerned that the 'cyber expert' referenced was someone looking
solely on the DarkWeb -- when nowhere in the definition of a DDoS does it say it has to
originate from the DarkWeb. That was misleading to the audience and it would have been
good to question the expert if a DDoS has to originate from infected bots -- it does not. Also,
claiming that our definition differs from other experts was also misleading as what I shared
with you was a definition outside of our agency -- from the top search result if you ask
Google "What is DDoS"? That should be corrected. http://www.digitalattackmap.
com/understanding-ddos/
As mentioned, the Pokemon Go DDoS attack is the best analogy for what happened here --
in this case using commercial cloud services which made it even harder to address real
comment bots vs. bots just throwing junk data at us.
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/gaming/pokemon-go-down-
servers-ddos-attack-hackers-poodlecorp-game-unavailable-a7140811.html
https://techcrunch.com/2016/07/17/ourmine-attacks-pokemon-go-servers/
Finally, even Brian Krebs when he had his massive DDoS directed at him refrained from
releasing the logs. Off the record we've chatted with him since these events. As discussed
with Billy on Friday, there's way too much private information that folks did not give
permission to FCC to release as well as operationally sensitive info there -- we're not alone
in that position as almost every CIO or CISO would have the same concerns. Off the record,
certain groups have sent tweets that show they're (1) using bots, and (2) that they're
searching for vulnerabilities:
This is an example of a group using bots to submit comments via the API (vs. having humans
go to the website directly) -- and what they're finding is there is a rate limit for the API as
mentioned to Billy on Friday: https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/
861962863245742084
And this is an example of the group either sending junk data to the API or doing recon on
the system to find potential exploits. This was on Thursday, when no one else had issues and
in fact it was the highest day on record ever for the FCC at more than 400,000 comments:
https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/862714335075893250
Per one of our internal experts that looked at the screenshot that group sent:
From: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 09:12
To: David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Byron Caswell (CTR); Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Subject: RE: Non urgent curiosity
David,
What I can’t tell you is what they did to trigger it. It could be he was throwing junk data,
or trying to find vulnerabilities. That could be why he hit the HTTP 500, when no one else has and
it seems to be working properly. Either that or there is something else “unique” about what he is
submitting that would allow him to throw this error.
-d.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:08 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Update, I see Billy’s tied-up, understand and will stand by. Many thanks.
Now is good.
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:06 PM
To: Billy Mitchell <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Dr. Bray
Sorry Mark,
Billy, are you available to talk to Dr. Bray? He is around right now if you’re
available.
Mark
202-418-0253
To: Greg Otto
Cc: Billy Mitchell; [email protected]; [email protected]; Goldy Kamali
Subject: RE: Following up from Friday
Date: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 3:41:02 PM
Hi Greg,
Many thanks. If there are specific quotes that Billy wants to use on the record, OMR left that door
open to identify. Just so you know, the group has been sending not-so-friendly emails and phone
calls to me throughout all of last week because someone opted to post my email and phone number
on Reddit, that’s why we’re also concerned.
It
From: Greg Otto [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 3:22 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Billy Mitchell <[email protected]>; [email protected];
[email protected]; Goldy Kamali <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Following up from Friday
Hi David —
I’m gonna chime in here — apologies for not adding perspective last week, as I was out on
paternity leave.
We can remove the DDoS sentence at the end of the story. Really doesn’t add to the story,
regardless of where the definition comes from.
Furthermore, I appreciate the references for how this all played out. We can amend the story at
the bottom to say there are multiple reports out there that say it looks like bots powered by
commercial cloud providers were the cause of the disruption.
I understand the sensitive nature of the story — we wouldn’t ever want you to share PII or
other sensitive IT functions — but I would stress that going on the record about what
happened would be extremely worthwhile.
I would even posit giving you the option to write a first-person article for us on how your IT
shop handled this — or what agencies can do in the future to defend against hacktivism /
DDoS attacks that are motivated by political causes. I truly think thats worthwhile for both
FedScoop and CyberScoop.
Feel free to reach to me at the number below if you have any other questions or concerns.
Regards,
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 10:04 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Billy and Chris,
Hope you both are doing well. Is there going to be a follow-up from our discussion on Friday
w/ Billy?
For Chris' article, I am concerned that the 'cyber expert' referenced was someone looking
solely on the DarkWeb -- when nowhere in the definition of a DDoS does it say it has to
originate from the DarkWeb. That was misleading to the audience and it would have been
good to question the expert if a DDoS has to originate from infected bots -- it does not. Also,
claiming that our definition differs from other experts was also misleading as what I shared
with you was a definition outside of our agency -- from the top search result if you ask
Google "What is DDoS"? That should be corrected.
http://www.digitalattackmap.com/understanding-ddos/
As mentioned, the Pokemon Go DDoS attack is the best analogy for what happened here --
in this case using commercial cloud services which made it even harder to address real
comment bots vs. bots just throwing junk data at us.
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/gaming/pokemon-go-down-
servers-ddos-attack-hackers-poodlecorp-game-unavailable-a7140811.html
https://techcrunch.com/2016/07/17/ourmine-attacks-pokemon-go-servers/
Finally, even Brian Krebs when he had his massive DDoS directed at him refrained from
releasing the logs. Off the record we've chatted with him since these events. As discussed
with Billy on Friday, there's way too much private information that folks did not give
permission to FCC to release as well as operationally sensitive info there -- we're not alone
in that position as almost every CIO or CISO would have the same concerns. Off the record,
certain groups have sent tweets that show they're (1) using bots, and (2) that they're
searching for vulnerabilities:
This is an example of a group using bots to submit comments via the API (vs. having humans
go to the website directly) -- and what they're finding is there is a rate limit for the API as
mentioned to Billy on Friday:
https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/861962863245742084
And this is an example of the group either sending junk data to the API or doing recon on
the system to find potential exploits. This was on Thursday, when no one else had issues
and in fact it was the highest day on record ever for the FCC at more than 400,000
comments: https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/862714335075893250
Per one of our internal experts that looked at the screenshot that group sent:
-d.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:08 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Update, I see Billy’s tied-up, understand and will stand by. Many thanks.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:08 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Billy Mitchell
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Dr. Bray
Now is good.
Sorry Mark,
Mark
202-418-0253
--
Greg Otto
Managing Editor - CyberScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
610.223.4586
Twitter: @gregotto
From: David Bray
To: Matthew Berry; Will Wiquist; Mark Wigfield; Brian Hart; Neil Grace
Subject: RE: from Ted
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 4:45:00 PM
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 4:41 PM
To: Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray
<[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b
)
(b) (5)
fcc.gov/document/statement-fcc-cio-denial-service-attack-fcc-
comment-system
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:47 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:43 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:38 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:37 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:35 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:33 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:31 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Ted Johnson [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:25 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: from Ted
Hi Mark,
--- This took place last night and earlier this morning, didn't it? I just wanted to make sure.
--- Do you know how many comments have been filed in the net neutrality proceeding in the
past 24 hours, Just trying to track John Oliver's influence.
Thanks,
Ted
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:38 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:37 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:35 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:33 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:31 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Ted Johnson [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:25 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: from Ted
Hi Mark,
--- This took place last night and earlier this morning, didn't it? I just wanted to make sure.
--- Do you know how many comments have been filed in the net neutrality proceeding in the
past 24 hours, Just trying to track John Oliver's influence.
Thanks,
Ted
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:43 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:38 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:37 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:35 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:33 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:31 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Ted Johnson [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:25 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: from Ted
Hi Mark,
I had two quick questions on the denial of service attacks.
--- This took place last night and earlier this morning, didn't it? I just wanted to make sure.
--- Do you know how many comments have been filed in the net neutrality proceeding in the
past 24 hours, Just trying to track John Oliver's influence.
Thanks,
Ted
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:37 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:35 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:33 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:31 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Ted Johnson [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:25 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: from Ted
Hi Mark,
I had two quick questions on the denial of service attacks.
--- This took place last night and earlier this morning, didn't it? I just wanted to make sure.
--- Do you know how many comments have been filed in the net neutrality proceeding in the
past 24 hours, Just trying to track John Oliver's influence.
Thanks,
Ted
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield; Matthew Berry; Brian Hart; Will Wiquist; Neil Grace
Subject: RE: from Ted
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 3:33:00 PM
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:31 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: from Ted
(b) (5)
From: Ted Johnson [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:25 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: from Ted
Hi Mark,
--- This took place last night and earlier this morning, didn't it? I just wanted to make sure.
--- Do you know how many comments have been filed in the net neutrality proceeding in the
past 24 hours, Just trying to track John Oliver's influence.
Thanks,
Ted
From: Shaun Waterman (FedScoop News)
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: FW: Following up from Friday
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 11:41:11 AM
I'm sorry David, I thinks it's best all around if I stay out of this
Shaun Waterman
FedScoop News
202 841 9017
[email protected]
Sent from a handheld wireless device and typed with thumbs. Please excuse any consequent
typos, contractions or impolite brevity.
Hi Shaun,
Happy Tuesday to you – would you have a chance to discuss this sometime (see below). I’m at
(b) (6)
Many thanks,
-d.
Hope you both are doing well. Is there going to be a follow-up from our discussion on Friday
w/ Billy?
For Chris' article, I am concerned that the 'cyber expert' referenced was someone looking
solely on the DarkWeb -- when nowhere in the definition of a DDoS does it say it has to
originate from the DarkWeb. That was misleading to the audience and it would have been
good to question the expert if a DDoS has to originate from infected bots -- it does not. Also,
claiming that our definition differs from other experts was also misleading as what I shared
with you was a definition outside of our agency -- from the top search result if you ask
Google "What is DDoS"? That should be corrected. http://www.digitalattackmap.
com/understanding-ddos/
As mentioned, the Pokemon Go DDoS attack is the best analogy for what happened here --
in this case using commercial cloud services which made it even harder to address real
comment bots vs. bots just throwing junk data at us.
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/gaming/pokemon-go-down-
servers-ddos-attack-hackers-poodlecorp-game-unavailable-a7140811.html
https://techcrunch.com/2016/07/17/ourmine-attacks-pokemon-go-servers/
Finally, even Brian Krebs when he had his massive DDoS directed at him refrained from
releasing the logs. Off the record we've chatted with him since these events. As discussed
with Billy on Friday, there's way too much private information that folks did not give
permission to FCC to release as well as operationally sensitive info there -- we're not alone
in that position as almost every CIO or CISO would have the same concerns. Off the record,
certain groups have sent tweets that show they're (1) using bots, and (2) that they're
searching for vulnerabilities:
This is an example of a group using bots to submit comments via the API (vs. having humans
go to the website directly) -- and what they're finding is there is a rate limit for the API as
mentioned to Billy on Friday: https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/
861962863245742084
And this is an example of the group either sending junk data to the API or doing recon on
the system to find potential exploits. This was on Thursday, when no one else had issues and
in fact it was the highest day on record ever for the FCC at more than 400,000 comments:
https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/862714335075893250
Per one of our internal experts that looked at the screenshot that group sent:
David,
What I can’t tell you is what they did to trigger it. It could be he was throwing junk data,
or trying to find vulnerabilities. That could be why he hit the HTTP 500, when no one else has and
it seems to be working properly. Either that or there is something else “unique” about what he is
submitting that would allow him to throw this error.
-d.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:08 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Update, I see Billy’s tied-up, understand and will stand by. Many thanks.
Now is good.
Sorry Mark,
I was at a lunch. I should be back in office in about 30 mins.
Billy, are you available to talk to Dr. Bray? He is around right now if you’re
available.
Mark
202-418-0253
From: Erik Scheibert
To: Christine Calvosa; Uttam Kumar
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:33:42 PM
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
________________________________________
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:36:39 AM
To: Mark Wigfield; David Bray; Brian Hart
Cc: ITleadership
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:32 AM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:28 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:09 AM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
________________________________________
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:07:02 AM
To: Brian Hart; Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Cc: Matthew Berry
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
________________________________________
From: Brian Hart
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:05:08 AM
To: Mark Wigfield; David Bray; Christine Calvosa
Cc: Matthew Berry
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Brian Hart
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:00 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:53 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:46 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
________________________________________
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:43:21 AM
To: David Bray; Christine Calvosa
Cc: Matthew Berry
Subject: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Kirby, Paul [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:34 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace
<[email protected]>
Cc: Stanton, Lynn <[email protected]>
Subject: ECFS
Obviously, it’s down again because I get no hits searching yesterday’s and today’s dates. So we are going to write
about that fact. Can you tell me if it’s due to the DDoS attack or the number of net neutrality
comments?
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-
3A__www.trdailyonline.com_&d=DwMFAg&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=2fIJDJ4pqy-
6Q6sHxEdvdscsL7D4biT86syzgydYRrc&m=-W-
ScwizADmVeotIzD1gEx5_3QnynJw4nVntB6MMQls&s=rhFycGDnqzdwkdsS-
QAEt2qQqqQ_rGmcXjD3omA2GEc&e=>
paul [email protected]
From: Uttam Kumar
To: Christine Calvosa; Erik Scheibert
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:23:44 PM
(b) (5)
Uttam Kumar
Associate CIO, Tailored Platforms and Data
OMD/Information Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Office: (202) 418-2264
[email protected]
From: Christine Calvosa
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:20 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Uttam Kumar <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:17 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:28 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:09 AM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Brian Hart
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:00 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:53 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:46 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: Mark Wigfield
To: Matthew Berry; David Bray; Brian Hart
Cc: ITleadership
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:20:11 PM
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:19 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:17 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:28 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:09 AM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Brian Hart
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:00 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:53 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:46 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: David Bray
To: Mark Stephens
Subject: Fw: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:18:43 PM
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:28 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:09 AM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Brian Hart
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:00 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:53 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:46 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:28 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:09 AM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Brian Hart
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:00 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:53 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:46 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
387
From: Michael White
To: Ajit Pai; Mignon Clyburn; Mike ORielly; PRA; webfeedback
Subject: Re: Internet Freedom Docket Comments
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 8:37:24 PM
Yesterday I sent this email, I doubted if get a response, however you have a clear problem and
I am not the only one to notice. You have a bot submitting random names and random
addresses constantly as a source of feedback. You are not seeing the will of the people through
those comments. You should start over and install some form of captcha in order to reduce the
bitting that is going on.
On Wed, May 10, 2017, 1:23 AM Michael White (b) (6) wrote:
Hi,
I have noticed that there are a ton of comments over support of the docket, but when I
research the names and addresses of those posting the comments, they do not match. I think
someone is falsifying comment postings and hoping that this can investigated for an honest
process.
From: Patrick Webre
To: James Brown; Mark Stone; D"wana Terry
Subject: RE: Is Comcast spamming the FCC?
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 3:29:41 PM
Hi,
Someone has submitted nearly half a million anti-net neutrality comments to the FCC, many of
which appear to be completely fake [1] [2] [3] — using stolen names and addresses. This
needs to be investigated and stopped now.
Help us prove it, and stop them. Use this form to search the FCC for fake comments in
your name.
This search will only yield results if your name was submitted to the FCC alongside a
suspicious anti-net neutrality comment. If you have submitted a comment to the FCC in
defense of net neutrality, your comment will not show up from this search.
If you find a fake comment filed using your name AND address that you are currently or
formerly associated with, email: [email protected] to let us know.
Over 1.5 million comments have been submitted so far on the proposal to repeal net neutrality,
and the vast majority are on our side.
But in recent days, it became clear that there are more comments coming in against net
neutrality than during past public comment periods. That's when people started taking a closer
look.
"No, I did not post this comment. In fact, I disagree with this comment," said Brad Emerick, one
of the people whose name was used to enter a fake comment. [4]
Everyone should check right now to see if this has happened to them.
ISPs have a long track record of fake grassroots campaigning, so it's not out of the question
that this may be a scheme funded by Comcast and their allies. And if that's true, we're talking
about something truly awful: criminal behavior. We need to know the truth--and we need to
make sure that these fake comments aren't influencing FCC's decision-making.
We've seen in the past that millions of comments from people in favor of net neutrality can
have an impact on FCC's decisions. And if fake, bot-generated comments have that kind of
impact, this could be a disaster.
Will you help us get to the bottom of this? Use this form to see if your name and
address were used to submit a shady, bot-generated, fake comment to the FCC.
Thanks for all you do,
Evan at FFTF
P.S. We need to find as many examples of real people whose names and addresses were
used to post these fake anti-net neutrality comments, can you share this on Facebook or
Twitter?
[1] JFoss Blog: http://jeffreyfossett.com/2017/05/13/fcc-filings.html
[2] The Verge: https://www.theverge.com/2017/5/10/15610744/anti-net-neutrality-fake-
comments-identities
[3] Techdirt: https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20170510/08191137334/bot-is-flooding-fcc-
website-with-fake-anti-net-neutrality-comments-alphabetical-order.shtml
[4] KDVR: http://kdvr.com/2017/05/14/7000-coloradans-names-addresses-used-to-post-fake-
comments-about-government-decision/
Fight for the Future works to protect your rights in the digital age.
Sent via ActionNetwork.org. To update your email address or to stop receiving emails from Fight for the Future, please
click here.
From: James Brown
To: James Brown
Subject: Fwd: Is Comcast spamming the FCC?
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 3:05:30 PM
Hi,
Someone has submitted nearly half a million anti-net neutrality comments to the FCC, many of
which appear to be completely fake [1] [2] [3] — using stolen names and addresses. This
needs to be investigated and stopped now.
Help us prove it, and stop them. Use this form to search the FCC for fake comments in
your name.
This search will only yield results if your name was submitted to the FCC alongside a
suspicious anti-net neutrality comment. If you have submitted a comment to the FCC in
defense of net neutrality, your comment will not show up from this search.
If you find a fake comment filed using your name AND address that you are currently or
formerly associated with, email: [email protected] to let us know.
Over 1.5 million comments have been submitted so far on the proposal to repeal net neutrality,
and the vast majority are on our side.
But in recent days, it became clear that there are more comments coming in against net
neutrality than during past public comment periods. That's when people started taking a closer
look.
"No, I did not post this comment. In fact, I disagree with this comment," said Brad Emerick, one
of the people whose name was used to enter a fake comment. [4]
Everyone should check right now to see if this has happened to them.
ISPs have a long track record of fake grassroots campaigning, so it's not out of the question
that this may be a scheme funded by Comcast and their allies. And if that's true, we're talking
about something truly awful: criminal behavior. We need to know the truth--and we need to
make sure that these fake comments aren't influencing FCC's decision-making.
We've seen in the past that millions of comments from people in favor of net neutrality can
have an impact on FCC's decisions. And if fake, bot-generated comments have that kind of
impact, this could be a disaster.
Will you help us get to the bottom of this? Use this form to see if your name and
address were used to submit a shady, bot-generated, fake comment to the FCC.
Evan at FFTF
P.S. We need to find as many examples of real people whose names and addresses were
used to post these fake anti-net neutrality comments, can you share this on Facebook or
Twitter?
Fight for the Future works to protect your rights in the digital age.
Sent via ActionNetwork.org. To update your email address or to stop receiving emails from Fight for the Future, please
click here.
This week, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) claimed that it was hit with a
distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack that took down their website *at the exact same
time* that massive numbers of people would have been heading there to comment in
support of Title II net neutrality protections following John Oliver’s viral segment on Sunday.
[1]
It’s a bold claim. The media widely reported that the FCC’s site crashed under the weight of
so much feedback from the public, and now they’re blaming a “cyber attack” instead.
Here’s the thing: they have provided zero evidence to support this. [2]
The FCC must be transparent and accountable to the public. Sign the petition telling
them that we want proof!
The FCC won’t give any details about the alleged attack, but there is a variety of evidence
that suggests they are wrong, or being intentionally misleading about what happened.
For example, Fight for the Future’s own logs from BattleForTheNet.com, which submits to
the FCC’s comment system, shows that their servers went down again on Monday night,
right after the John Oliver segment re-aired on HBO. [3]
Their site also went down several times over the past few weeks during periods of much
lower traffic, which suggests it was their outdated system, not an attack, that caused the
outage.
Sign the petition: Tell the FCC to stop hiding the truth and tell us what really
happened.
We have repeatedly called for the FCC to release their logs to an independent security
researcher or major media outlet who can verify their story and inform the public about what
really happened here, but so far they have refused.
Several members of Congress have even weighed in demanding answers, and the FCC has
been silent. [4]
Did they invent this story of a DDoS attack to cover up the fact that their rickety website
couldn’t handle a large volume of comments, and likely silenced the voices of thousands of
people attempting to comment in support of net neutrality?
Or, perhaps even more disturbing, do they actually have evidence of a DDoS attack, but
won’t release it because it shows that their site was attacked by someone trying to prevent
net neutrality supporters spurred on by John Oliver from making their voices heard?
Either way, the public has a right to know, and the FCC has a responsibility to
maintain a functioning website to receive feedback from the public about important
issues that impact all of us. Click here to sign our urgent petition demanding
transparency now.
Given that the current FCC chairman is a former top lawyer for Verizon and an open enemy
of net neutrality, and in light of the telecom industry’s long history of astroturfing and paying
shady groups to do their dirty work, we are extremely skeptical of the FCC’s claims.
Cybersecurity experts are skeptical too, and major media outlets like Newsweek, USA
Today, and the Washington Post are questioning the agency’s official line. [5]
Secrecy is the enemy of freedom and democracy. The FCC must immediately address this
situation or it is proving beyond a doubt that it is completely captured by companies like
Comcast and Verizon, and no longer working in the public interest.
P.S. The person at the FCC responsible for this is their Chief Information Officer, David
Bray. You can call or email him directly and encourage him to release their logs to a security
researcher. Here is is contact info: [email protected], 202-418-2020.
Fight for the Future works to protect your rights in the digital age.
Click here to learn more
Donate $3 to keep us going
Click here to receive fewer emails from us
Sent via ActionNetwork.org. To update your email address or to stop receiving emails from Fight for the Future,
please click here.
From: David Bray
To: Jeannette
Subject: Re: Is the FCC lying?
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 9:28:14 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Dear David,
I received this email (below) a few hours back .. hence forwarding onto you ...
Interesting and intriguiging ..
If anything, please,
What can you apprise me of it ....
Warm Regards,
Jeannette
Street
Hi, this email is a tiny bit complicated but it’s super important.
If you only have a second and you care at all about government transparency and free
speech: click here to learn more and take action.
This week, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) claimed that it was hit with a
distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack that took down their website *at the exact same
time* that massive numbers of people would have been heading there to comment in support
of Title II net neutrality protections following John Oliver’s viral segment on Sunday. [1]
It’s a bold claim. The media widely reported that the FCC’s site crashed under the weight of so
much feedback from the public, and now they’re blaming a “cyber attack” instead.
Here’s the thing: they have provided zero evidence to support this. [2]
The FCC must remain transparent and accountable. Their website failure means
thousands of comments in support of net neutrality were lost. Will you submit one to
make sure that our voices are still heard?
The FCC won’t give any details about the alleged attack, but there is a variety of evidence that
suggests they are wrong, or being intentionally misleading about what happened.
For example, Fight for the Future’s own logs from BattleForTheNet.com, which submits to the
FCC’s comment system, shows that their servers went down again on Monday night, right after
the John Oliver segment re-aired on HBO. [3]
Their site also went down several times over the past few weeks during periods of much lower
traffic, which suggests it was their outdated system, not an attack, that caused the outage.
The most important thing right now is that we continue flooding the FCC with comments
from REAL people in support of net neutrality. Click here to submit yours!
We have repeatedly called for the FCC to release their logs to an independent security
researcher or major media outlet who can verify their story and inform the public about what
really happened here, but so far they have refused.
Several members of Congress have even weighed in demanding answers, and the FCC has
been silent. [4]
Did they invent this story of a DDoS attack to cover up the fact that their rickety website
couldn’t handle a large volume of comments, and likely silenced the voices of thousands of
people attempting to comment in support of net neutrality?
Or, perhaps even more disturbing, do they actually have evidence of a DDoS attack, but won’t
release it because it shows that their site was attacked by someone trying to prevent net
neutrality supporters spurred on by John Oliver from making their voices heard?
Either way, it’s clear our opponents are playing dirty. We need to fight them by making
sure that we keep real comments from the public flowing in.
Will you use our tool to submit a comment with just one click?
Given that the current FCC chairman is a former top lawyer for Verizon and an open enemy of
net neutrality, and in light of the telecom industry’s long history of astroturfing and paying
shady groups to do their dirty work, we are extremely skeptical of the FCC’s claims.
Cybersecurity experts are skeptical too, and major media outlets like Newsweek, USA Today,
and the Washington Post are questioning the agency’s official line. [5]
Secrecy is the enemy of freedom and democracy. The FCC must immediately address this
situation or it is proving beyond a doubt that it is completely captured by companies like
Comcast and Verizon, and no longer working in the public interest.
P.S. The person at the FCC responsible for this is their Chief Information Officer, David Bray.
You can call or email him directly and encourage him to release their logs to a security
researcher. Here is is contact info: [email protected], 202-418-2020.
Fight for the Future works to protect your rights in the digital age.
Sent via ActionNetwork.org. To update your email address or to stop receiving emails from Fight for the Future, please
click here.
From: David Bray
To: Neil Grace
Subject: RE: John Oliver
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 3:50:00 PM
Terrific and thank you Neil. It’s been quite a full day.
Truly appreciated.
From: Neil Grace
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:47 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: John Oliver
Hi David,
OMR has helped put out this official comment, hope this helps:
https://www.fcc.gov/document/statement-fcc-cio-denial-service-attack-fcc-comment-system
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 1:22 PM
To: 'David McCabe' <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: John Oliver
Hi David, probably best to route your request through Neil and others at OMR. Off the record ECFS is
and has been running, just some folks are hitting it with high traffic and not with the purpose to file
comments. OMR is on point for queries.
Neil is the best POC.
From: David McCabe [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 1:15 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: John Oliver
I'm also wondering if you had an update on the number of comments you've gotten over the
last 14 hours or so, post the HBO segment.
Thanks!
David
Hey all — Sorry for the late email. I was wondering if you had any comment on the
segment John Oliver did tonight revisiting net neutrality.
There's speculation online that Oliver's segment also crashed the FCC's online comment
system, and I was wondering if you could confirm.
Thanks!
David
--
David McCabe
Technology Reporter, Axios
[email protected] | @dmccabe
Cell and Signal: (b) (6)
--
David McCabe
Technology Reporter, Axios
[email protected] | @dmccabe
Cell and Signal: (b) (6)
From: David McCabe
To: David Bray
Cc: Neil Grace
Subject: Re: John Oliver
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 3:47:14 PM
Thanks!
Hi David,
OMR has helped put out this official comment, hope this helps:
https://www.fcc.gov/document/statement-fcc-cio-denial-service-attack-fcc-comment-system
Hi David, probably best to route your request through Neil and others at OMR. Off the record ECFS
is and has been running, just some folks are hitting it with high traffic and not with the purpose to
file comments. OMR is on point for queries.
Hope all is well. David, we've never worked together before but my editor here is Kim Hart,
and she said you'd worked together at the agency. I was wondering if you had anything you
could share about the issues with ECFS.
I'm also wondering if you had an update on the number of comments you've gotten over the
last 14 hours or so, post the HBO segment.
Thanks!
David
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
Hey all — Sorry for the late email. I was wondering if you had any comment on the
segment John Oliver did tonight revisiting net neutrality.
There's speculation online that Oliver's segment also crashed the FCC's online comment
system, and I was wondering if you could confirm.
Thanks!
David
--
David McCabe
[email protected] | @dmccabe
--
David McCabe
[email protected] | @dmccabe
--
David McCabe
Technology Reporter, Axios
[email protected] | @dmccabe
Cell and Signal: (b) (6)
From: Erik Scheibert
To: John Skudlarek
Subject: Re: John Oliver
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 9:36:42 AM
(b) (5)
On 5/8/17, 9:34 AM, someone claiming to be "John Skudlarek" <John Skudlarek@fcc gov> wrote:
(b)
(5)
________________________________________
From: "Erik Scheibert" <Erik Scheibert@fcc gov>
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 at 9:32:47 AM
To: "David Bray" <David Bray@fcc gov>, "Venkat Veeramneni (CTR)" <Venkat Veeramneni ctr@fcc gov>, "Uttam Kumar" <Uttam Kumar@fcc gov>,
"Mark Savi" <Mark Savi@fcc gov>, "Christine Calvosa" <Marie Calvosa@fcc gov>, "Aman Sharma (CTR)" <Aman Sharma ctr@fcc gov>, "ITleadership"
<ITleadership@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: John Oliver
(b) (5)
On 5/8/17, 9:23 AM, someone claiming to be "David Bray" <David Bray@fcc gov> wrote:
(b) (5)
Begin forwarded message:
From: Mark Wigfield <Mark Wigfield@fcc gov>
Date: May 8, 2017 at 07:19:51 EDT
To: Brian Hart <Brian Hart@fcc gov>, Will Wiquist <Will Wiquist@fcc gov>, David Bray <David Bray@fcc gov>, Neil Grace <Neil Grace@fcc gov>
Subject: Re: John Oliver
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 8, 2017 7:02 AM
To: David McCabe; Brian Hart; Will Wiquist; David Bray; Neil Grace
Subject: Re: John Oliver
Adding Dave Bray and Neil Is ECFS down?
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network
From: David McCabe
Sent: Sunday, May 7, 2017 11:48 PM
To: Brian Hart; Mark Wigfield; Will Wiquist
Subject: John Oliver
Hey all — Sorry for the late email I was wondering if you had any comment on the segment John Oliver did tonight revisiting net neutrality
There's speculation online that Oliver's segment also crashed the FCC's online comment system, and I was wondering if you could confirm
Thanks!
David
--
David McCabe
Technology Reporter, Axios
mccabe@axios com | @dmccabe <https://urldefense proofpoint com/v2/url?u=http-
3A__twitter com_dmccabe&d=DwMFaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=2fIJDJ4pqy-
6Q6sHxEdvdscsL7D4biT86syzgydYRrc&m=8VABzLC_4SUHI1yzi4CQLpOLNuQLhyrFurf4eDJiSTw&s=nsK04ptyQ4_MUWoxep38yZyvosoaQfOhMG8327Hnz6U&e=>
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 8, 2017 7:02 AM
To: David McCabe; Brian Hart; Will Wiquist; David Bray; Neil Grace
Subject: Re: John Oliver
Hey all — Sorry for the late email. I was wondering if you had any comment on the segment
John Oliver did tonight revisiting net neutrality.
There's speculation online that Oliver's segment also crashed the FCC's online comment
system, and I was wondering if you could confirm.
Thanks!
David
--
David McCabe
Technology Reporter, Axios
[email protected] | @dmccabe
Cell and Signal: (b) (6)
From: Ajit Pai
To: Justin Crawford
Subject: RE: Keep fighting the good fight
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 9:20:00 AM
Thanks a lot, Justin! I really appreciate the support and kind words. I hope you submitted a comment yourself! And on my end, I'll keep on
keeping on, to the best of my ability.
-----Original Message-----
From: Justin Crawford(b) (6)
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 6:19 PM
To: Ajit Pai <[email protected]>
Subject: Keep fighting the good fight
Wanted to give you a thumbs up amid the influx of hate you are probably receiving today based on the reddit threads I'm seeing. I support all that
you are doing, and hope the rants of a comedian do not interfere with the disentanglement of the internet from the arms of the government.
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.reddit.com_r_technology_comments_69y4as_john-5Foliver-5Fis-5Fcalling-5Fon-
5Fyou-5Fto-5Fsave-
5Fnet_&d=DwIBaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=zuHkmYcOLikDapwhFdjSVA&m=jE4VY1q6jJKdHR3xV44i8KcfNxFSnNVq9YXtuQ5-
mFo&s=7DFb_Z_oPsk7n8qRkJpqca6-UTmT_0H1XqUFD_L8mCc&e=
Good thing Title II was around for the creation of such a site, it surely would have been censored and removed without those protections!
Hah.
Justin Crawford
From: David Bray
To: Lerner, Jennifer
Subject: Re: May 17
Date: Saturday, May 13, 2017 9:27:02 PM
Agreed -- I will make the case however they may not do a press release b/c the activists groups
involved want to create a spectacle however we may do something on background for
reporters. The blog post may or may not happen; we'll see.
Thanks for the update. Best of luck on all these exciting fronts. And then, of course, there is your
ever-in-the-news day job…
J
Jenn
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Saturday, May 13, 2017 7:12 PM
To: Lerner, Jennifer <Jennifer [email protected]>
Subject: Re: May 17
Sounds like a great discussion Jenn and yes we can try to re-vector for a future date in D.C.
To: Lerner, Jennifer <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: May 17
Humbled and many thanks Jenn.
Today we received massive DDoS attacks as a result of the Jon Oliver video last night --
fortunately we were in the cloud.
Alas 17 May in the morning is when I am speaking at American U. followed by chairing a
GSA meeting followed by a discussion at FTC all before 1pm -- is the morning of 18 May
possible to meet for breakfast around 0930?
Best regards,
-d.
(b) (6) Maybe I can re-schedule my
breakfast meeting. Would coming to the (b) (6) area for breakfast be difficult for you?
Jenn
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, May 07, 2017 8:58 PM
To: Lerner, Jennifer <Jennifer [email protected]>
Cc: Agliati, Pia <Pia [email protected]>
Subject: Re: May 17
Hi Jenn,
Doing well here. FCC recently had some good news
http://www.nextgov.com/cloud-computing/2017/05/fcc-captures-second-cio-100-
award/137469/
... and I also found out I've been accepted as a 2017-2018 German Marshall Memorial Fellow
which involves 24 days of travel to 5 different cities in Europe in March 2018 to focus on
Trans-Atlantic issues of shared concern.
I'd love to meet-up however I'm speaking at American University that day re: the Senior
Executive Service. Any chance you might be able to have dinner that evening downtown
around 6pm or 6:30pm?
I'll keep the evening of 17 May reserved for you in the event that it also works for your
schedule -- my apologies that lunch is already booked.
With highest regards,
-d.
Yes -- we are a tad in the news a lot lately. Doing my best to provide a calm non-anxious and
non-partisan SES presence in the midst of it all.
What happened earlier this week does raise questions about how we can continue to do public
service and public commenting in an era where anyone can write an automated program (aka,
a bot) that posts pretends to be a human but isn't, or tons of comments that say the same things
over and over, or ties up a website to deny service to others.
The demands to share our logs are a combination of silly (no one does this + they are
massively large) and not recognizing that there are the IP addresses of people and their ISP
providers who filed who did not give permission to have that private information shared. Even
if we spent a whole lot of time scrubbing that data there's still the risk that someone's privacy
could be exposed so of course we can't share (and the protest group insisting on this knows
that).
Below is a draft blog post I have teed up for the new Chairman to see if it will help provide
more details to the public -- he may not choose to share it:
The last few days have placed intense focus on the FCC's commenting process. This post is
intended to share what we can on topics relating to that.
While I am not a lawyer, as I understand it FCC's commenting process is meant to raise legal
issues to the Commissioners to consider in their deliberations. It was never meant to be a vote
or tally of how many comments are for or against a certain proceeding.
Our cloud-based electronic comment filing system is one part of the process which now
receives a bulk of comments vs. mail-based submissions. Folks can submit individual
comments using a full form -- which usually lawyers and other telecom practitioners do
involving multiple pages of legal briefs -- or a "simplified method" for a very quick individual
comment. Before the recent proceeding 17-108 started we also stood up a backup mechanism
using a different commercial cloud system for bulk uploads using a Comma Spreadsheet
Values (CSV) format akin to a spreadsheet which has been done for other high profile
proceedings in the past.
The FCC’s electronic comment filing system also has an Application Programming Interface
(API) for submissions because with the legacy system folks would use automated programs,
"bots", to crawl our webpages and submit or search for comments in an automated fashion. In
the past these bots had benign purposes, such as making a copy of any new comment filed in
the system, alerting the public if a new proceeding was open, and other knowledge discovery
tools.
Before this API existed with the system, the bots that crawled the legacy commenting system
created massive loads on the system compared to a normal user submitting a comment. There
were times when certain bot, either poorly coded or coded to create a large volume of traffic,
would tie up the system and make it appear unavailable for human users. When we were not
cloud-based we would have to stand-up additional servers to address the load. Now that we are
cloud-based this is easier however there are still limits to how quickly the system can index
new comments and scale.
To human users it would look like the website had "crashed" when really they were being
denied service as the old website was too busy responding to the bots. This happened in 2014
though at the time we chose not to talk about the automated programs repeatedly hitting the
FCC website vs. the number of human visitors.
At the FCC, we want to support openness as much as possible, so that anyone can provide
comment on an FCC proceeding. At the same time we were concerned about the increasing
ability of to create a massive bombardment to the commenting system. As such, starting in
2014, we did three actions:
1. We provided an alternative mechanism for folks wanting to file in bulk for high profile-
proceedings, so they did not have to use bots to do this and deny service to individual humans
visiting the website directly.
2. We modernized the legacy commenting system to use an API vs. web-crawling bots. As
mentioned, APIs allow knowledge discovery in an automated form. At the same time, the API
requires users to get a key and all keys have a set rate for the number of requests that can be
done per hour similar to http://Data.gov
3. We moved the legacy commenting system – with new code – to commercial cloud services
so the cloud provider could spin up more servers if there were a lot of humans wanting to
leave comments on a proceeding.
Even with our move to commercial cloud services there are some challenges if we are to
remain 100% open to all in our internet era. For example, if folks wanted to they could request
multiple keys for an API and then use those multiple keys to send high volumes of traffic to
the FCC. If they are using commercial web services it will look legitimate and may in fact be
legitimate except that their technique is denying service to other individuals who want to file a
comment.
In addition, API calls with multiple keys could be written in a way that ties up the system
responding to automated requests and causes the serve to deny other requests – either human
or automated – from providing services, making it look like the system is unavailable.
Lastly, on the human vs. automated question, we considered implementing a test to see if we
were dealing with a human like ReCAPTCHA or NoCAPTCHA however these systems
present challenges to individuals who have different needs visually or otherwise.
In our internet era, bots and API provide openness and knowledge discovery. They also
unfortunately allow folks to either send the same comment over and over again and FCC does
not get into the business of distinguishing if a comment is valid or not.
As mentioned, while I am not a lawyer, the FCC commenting process was never meant to be a
vote or tally of how many comments are for or against a certain proceeding. Bots also can call
the API to file the same comment over and over again at a much faster rate than humans. Bots
On May 13, 2017, at 16:18, Lerner, Jennifer <[email protected]> wrote:
But I will be back for future trips.
(b) (6)
Best,
Jenn
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 10:32 PM
To: Lerner, Jennifer <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: May 17
Oh dear. Any availability the day before (16 May?). Sorry the calendar is so full as I definitely
would like to catch-up with you soon.
Drat; I’m sorry that it isn’t working for May 17. (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 8:36 PM
To: Lerner, Jennifer <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: May 17
Humbled and many thanks Jenn.
Today we received massive DDoS attacks as a result of the Jon Oliver video last night --
fortunately we were in the cloud.
Alas 17 May in the morning is when I am speaking at American U. followed by chairing a
GSA meeting followed by a discussion at FTC all before 1pm -- is the morning of 18 May
possible to meet for breakfast around 0930?
Best regards,
-d.
... and I also found out I've been accepted as a 2017-2018 German Marshall Memorial Fellow
which involves 24 days of travel to 5 different cities in Europe in March 2018 to focus on
Trans-Atlantic issues of shared concern.
I'd love to meet-up however I'm speaking at American University that day re: the Senior
Executive Service. Any chance you might be able to have dinner that evening downtown
around 6pm or 6:30pm?
I'll keep the evening of 17 May reserved for you in the event that it also works for your
schedule -- my apologies that lunch is already booked.
With highest regards,
-d.
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:29 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:21 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:20 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: FW: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: Margaret McGill [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:16 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: More on DDoS
Hey, is it possible to get this on the record (aka with a name attached)? My editors are
pushing for that.
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:29 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:21 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:20 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: FW: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: Margaret McGill [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:16 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: More on DDoS
Hey, is it possible to get this on the record (aka with a name attached)? My editors are
pushing for that.
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Hey, is it possible to get this on the record (aka with a name attached)? My editors are
pushing for that.
Yes, on background, from an FCC official, there were similar DDoS attacks back in 2014 right after
the Jon Oliver episode and that chart shows it wasn’t because of a “high volume” of comments, it
was because of high traffic to prevent people from filing comments. But a key difference is that that
back in 2014 there were far less options to address the DDoS because we were not cloud-based.
From: Margaret McGill [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:02 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: More on DDoS
Hey all,
I remember during the background press call on the net neutrality NPRM, someone
mentioned that the FCC has been hit with malicious attacks before.
Was there a similar DDoS attack during the last net neutrality debate? Did it also occur after
the Jon Oliver episode in 2014?
I was looking at this chart of comment volume during the last debate, and it doesn't look like
there was a huge surge following the Oliver segment in June 2014 that would have been
enough comments to overwhelm the system.
Please let me know what you can today! I'm doing a short story.
Thanks,
Margaret
Margaret Harding McGill
Politico Pro Tech
703-842-1799 (w)
(b) (6) (c)
[email protected]
From: Matthew Berry
To: David Bray; Mark Wigfield; Brian Hart
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 5:12:07 PM
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:11 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:06 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:04 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; David Bray
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:04 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; David Bray
<[email protected]>
Subject: FW: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: Margaret McGill [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:02 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: More on DDoS
Hey all,
I remember during the background press call on the net neutrality NPRM, someone
mentioned that the FCC has been hit with malicious attacks before.
Was there a similar DDoS attack during the last net neutrality debate? Did it also occur after
the Jon Oliver episode in 2014?
I was looking at this chart of comment volume during the last debate, and it doesn't look like
there was a huge surge following the Oliver segment in June 2014 that would have been
enough comments to overwhelm the system.
Please let me know what you can today! I'm doing a short story.
Thanks,
Margaret
Margaret Harding McGill
Politico Pro Tech
703-842-1799 (w)
(b) (6) (c)
[email protected]
From: Brian Hart
To: Matthew Berry; Mark Wigfield; David Bray
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 5:04:23 PM
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:04 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; David Bray
<[email protected]>
Subject: FW: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: Margaret McGill [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:02 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: More on DDoS
Hey all,
I remember during the background press call on the net neutrality NPRM, someone
mentioned that the FCC has been hit with malicious attacks before.
Was there a similar DDoS attack during the last net neutrality debate? Did it also occur after
the Jon Oliver episode in 2014?
I was looking at this chart of comment volume during the last debate, and it doesn't look like
there was a huge surge following the Oliver segment in June 2014 that would have been
enough comments to overwhelm the system.
Please let me know what you can today! I'm doing a short story.
Thanks,
Margaret
Margaret Harding McGill
Politico Pro Tech
703-842-1799 (w)
(b) (6) (c)
[email protected]
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 3:13 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: More website troubles?
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 3:06 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: More website troubles?
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Was there another attack? What was the issue? What is the FCC doing to ensure that
legitimate commenters are not deterred by website problems?
Thanks,
Margaret
Margaret Harding McGill
Politico Pro Tech
703-842-1799 (w)
(b) (6) (c)
[email protected]
(b) (5)
Was there another attack? What was the issue? What is the FCC doing to ensure that
legitimate commenters are not deterred by website problems?
Thanks,
Margaret
Margaret Harding McGill
Politico Pro Tech
703-842-1799 (w)
(b) (6) (c)
[email protected]
From: Sam Nevens (b) (6)
Sent: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 10:24:21 AM
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: Net Neutrality
Hi David,
Please note that the link you've just provided directs individuals wishing to file a comment to:
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/proceedings?q=name:((17-108))
Which, when clicking the "+express" link as directed per the previous page, I was unable to fill out the
form via a mobile device and had to use a desktop computer instead. Moreover, I am not part of a "group"
wishing to file a bulk comment. I am an individual.
Hi Sam,
There has always been the option to use this simple option to file comments as
well: https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
Unfortunately, the FCC has made it impossible for a complaint regarding Net Neutrality to be filed on their
website via a mobile device. This, as well as the claim that the FCC was under a DDoS attack, when
likely they were just overwhelmed by the amount of people who wanted to file a complaint, is the reason
you are getting emails from concerned citizens.
If you'd like me to pass the info over to the person directing others to contact you via this email regarding
the issue, I highly suggest first fixing the FCC complaint page to accept mobile users as well as a higher
number of users at one time...
Thank you.
I'm calling for the FCC to release its logs to independent security analysts regarding the alleged DDoS
attack. If you guys had any sense at all you may realize that either....
1) The FCC is being intentionally misleading, and trying to claim that the surge in traffic from large
numbers of people attempting to access their site through John Oliver’s GoFCCYourself.com redirect
amounts to a “DDoS” attack, to let themselves off the hook for essentially silencing large numbers of
people by not having a properly functioning site to receive comments from the public about an important
issue, or—worst case—is preparing a bogus legal argument that somehow John Oliver’s show itself was
the DDoS attack.
2) Someone actually did DDoS the FCC’s site at the exact same time as John Oliver’s segment, in order
to actively prevent people from being able to comment in support of keeping the Title II net neutrality rules
many of us fought for in 2015.
Do you really want your children to grow up in a world where they can't access information someone else
determined isn't useful or vital or equal?
From: Joe Sak
To: Ajit Pai; Mignon Clyburn; Mike ORielly
Subject: Net Neutrality and the DDos Attack Claim
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 9:56:15 PM
Hello,
The FCC is not under a DDos attack, there has been a legitimate call to arms being made by
actual people thanks to your views on Net Neutrality. You and your agency opened a public
forum in which you requested that people leave their thoughts and comment on the subject.
People are commenting and leaving their thoughts and you claim this to be an attack. This is
an illegitimate and underhanded move to block peoples speech. You and your agency are
receiving the exact feedback you requested, and have now shut it down. This is not a DDos
attack, this is people speaking up about problems we see with your policies. Net Neutrality
and Title II should remain in place and are forces of good.
I am extremely disappointed in your handling of negative criticism and in the way you treat
people who are giving fair and valid commentary on a topic you asked them to comment on.
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
I am contacting you today because of a reason you've likely been in contact with many other
concerned citizens about already. Like countless others, I was never able to leave my
comment about the new net neutrality on the fcc's comment board due to these DDoS
attacks. I'm here asking the FCC to pass along their logs to private investigators to indeed
prove there were DDoS attacks preventing the comments. Net Neutrality is a serious issue
many feel strongly about, and the one place their voice may have been heard was
inaccessible. It only makes sense to prove to the concerned public you were DDoS'd at this
point- especially such an easy task of providing your logs.
Thanks,
Brandon Bristow
From: David Bray
To: Scott Gillies
Cc: ECFSHelp
Subject: Re: Net Neutrality Proceedings 17-108 / Release Logs
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:33:08 PM
Thank you for your note Scott and it would be best if you file your comment either
using www.fcc.gov/ECFS which should be available or there has always been an alternative
easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file comments from
should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. We have noticed some bulk
filers of lots of comments are using the individual mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in
bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially making it difficult for individuals to file.
I had tried to submit this via the form on your website, but every time I click "Submit" it does
nothing (in two different web browsers). Not sure if it is because your website is still having
issues (and while I'm at it, please release the logs to the public so we can verify your claims
that your site went down because of a DDoS attack...), but here are my thoughts on the matter:
The internet is a great equalizer. It allows people without tons of money and/or political
backing to spread their ideas cheaply and effectively and translate them into action. We
absolutely, 100%, no question NEED to keep it this way. Corporations already control too
much in our country and our world. The internet seems like the last frontier where the little
guy has a chance to succeed and I would be very saddened to see this change.
To quote an email I received today from Win Without War, "Net neutrality allows all of us to
speak truth to power. It allows us to throw light on injustice, and to coordinate, organize, and
support each other’s struggles. Net neutrality helps preserve equal access to the most
important currency in our democracy, ideas."
It seems to be getting harder and harder to speak truth to power without getting drowned out.
Please do not take away one of our best tools to do so. Please preserve Net Neutrality and Title
II.
Thank you,
Scott Gillies
US Citizen
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield
Subject: Fwd: one other IE prob for ECFS
Date: Thursday, May 18, 2017 3:30:15 PM
FYI -- a lot of Jonathan Make's issues appear to be on his machine with a plugin he is using...
Thank you Jonathan… The reason this only happens in Internet Explorer is because PDF
Complete is hooking into IE, but not other browsers. PDF Complete if I recall correctly is a
Windows based software similar to Adobe Acrobat. You could try disabling this plug in in IE
and see if your errors continue.
I also get this error message a fair bit but only in IE when trying to open filings
<image001.png>
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 6:54 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: David Bray
Subject: RE: ECFS
One issue is I often have to wait a bit before I can execute certain commands in ECFS in
IE.
Like, moving from the 25 filings/screen to another page view.
https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2017/05/18/2017-09885/promoting-
technological-solutions-to-combat-contraband-wireless-device-use-in-correctional
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 9:08 PM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: David Bray
Subject: Re: ECFS
Sure.
For the first time since two Sundays ago,
this afternoon, it worked OK in IE.
On May 16, 2017, at 4:37 PM, Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-
news.com> wrote:
Not sure on IE. Quite possibly. It apparently is an issue that IE has
generally with ECFS.
It takes a lot of time to do any particular function. And it crashes often. I
could probably send specific issues as they occur.
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR) [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 4:29 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: David Bray
Subject: Re: ECFS
I understand. When you say not that stable, are there reproducible
issues I can have the team look into when using Internet Explorer, or
more along the lines of usability feedback (also welcome, but
prioritized differently of course)?
Once I have confirmed this is pushed to production and I can verify
the fix, I’ll let you know.
Andrew
On May 16, 2017, at 4:24 PM, Make, Jonathan
<[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Andrew and David.
I think that is it.
I have not yet been able to use consistently Firefox to access
ECFS.
So I have been using Internet Explorer.
Which is not that stable, either, for that application, but it
does have more functionality.
Would you be able to please let me know once the Firefox
functionality is fully restored?
Thanks for all you do.
Jonathan
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
[mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 3:37 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Subject: Re: ECFS
Jonathan,
Big thanks again for reporting and detailing the issue so
well with Firefox. The team is testing a fix for this that
should deploy later this week.
Beyond the numbering and pagination issues (and the
missing RSS feed) on Firefox, I wanted to follow up if
you had identified any other issues.
Andrew
On May 12, 2017, at 1:39 PM, David Bray
<[email protected]> wrote:
Many thanks. Beyond the numbering issue,
Jonathan send any screenshots + URL of other
issues you’re having or if the issues are
happening on a browser other than Firefox.
Thank you.
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:26 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Make,
Jonathan <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
I am looking into this. My last status update on
this was that we had a fix for the numbering
issue in the works that had to be tested. I will
check if it made its way to production.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Make, Jonathan <jmake@warren-
news.com>; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
If it is still not working for you, yes and please
send a screenshot + the URL you are trying to
access and send to Andrew – you can cc me.
Andrew – can you look into this today? Thank
you.
We are aware that some versions of Firefox
have bugs and are trying to identify a fix.
Other browsers should work fine.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-
news.com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Do you want me to take some screenshots
now?
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:08 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
It could be a new Firefox version has bugs – in
the future please send us URLs and
screenshots.
Same with IE. On our end and with several
others it has been working too. The challenge
with IT for websites is isolating whether it’s the
system that is delivering the information or the
browser (on the user’s end) that is showing it
or some combination. If other folks had the
same plug-in or browser version that could
have been an issue.
If your browser was cached that could have
also been an issue. Lots of different variables.
We strive to help as much as possible, so
screenshots and URLs will help Andrew (copied
here) at the Team “sleuth” what’s going on
either at the server end or the web browser
end.
Best regards,
-d.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-
news.com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Andrew
Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>;
Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks again.
Just based on what others have said outside
this organization, I don’t think this is limited to
only my computer.
Firefox will not show most filings made at any
time.
IE as of today is showing them (except
obviously today and yesterday which have not
yet been posted at all). But IE before today I do
not think was showing them, either.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49 PM
To: Make, Jonathan; Andrew Nebus (CTR)
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: ECFS
The Firefox issue makes me wonder Jonathan if
you have a plug-in or antivirus too that’s
causing the issue as we’re simply not seeing it
here – I use Firefox and haven’t had an issue
nor have other folks.
Sometimes browsers do become corrupted on
local machines. Andrew Nebus copied here,
and again off the record as we’re trying to
provide IT assistance can help, can work with
you if it arises. In the future if you send Andrew
URLs that you think are not working, we can
trying them ourselves and see if we see the
same result.
Also to be clear, when you say on IE could case
see all filings made before Thursday on IE, did
you try IE on Tuesday as well or just Firefox?
Hope this helps.
From: Make, Jonathan [mailto:jmake@warren-
news.com]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:10 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>;
Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: ECFS
Thanks, David.
I believe I am going to speak with someone @
OMR later today, for that part, and to ensure
we’re all on the same page.
ECFS all this week has been barely working on
Firefox. Not just the page number issue, which
began last week, but many if not most filings
from any time period do not display using
Firefox. Right now, I am pleased to say, I can
see all filings made before Thursday on IE. That
was not happening earlier this week, but it is
now.
Cheers.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:07 PM
To: Make, Jonathan
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Subject: Re: ECFS
Hi Jonathan,
All off the record as I am trying to provide
you IT help, not a media comment:
When you say ECFS is not entirely working
now on Firefox -- do you mean that it's not
working at all, or it's not working fully (as in
the numbers at the top of a search aren't
working) however that it does work in IE and
Chrome? We are aware that some versions
of Firefox have bugs and are trying to
identify a fix. Other browsers should work
fine.
You are correct that the auto-dissemination
has not happened for yesterday and today.
We have turned it off until we can also bring
in the filings done via the bulk filing
mechanism this weekend, that way they're
all there at the same time together.
Yesterday we didn't receive reports of issues
and that was unofficially the highest day
ever for comments received by the FCC ever
(you'd have to ask OMR for details). Monday
you already know what that was. Tuesday
was fine. Off the record, Wednesday
afternoon there was an issue where some
entities were using the RSS feeds to create
excessive loads on the search function of
ECFS with massive queries that was address
that evening.
Hope this helps in our non-normal times,
-d.
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
“Beginning on Sunday night at midnight, our analysis reveals that the FCC
was subject to multiple distributed denial-of-service attacks (DDos)," FCC
chief information officer David Bray said in a statement Monday.
"These were deliberate attempts by external actors to bombard the FCC’s
comment system with a high amount of traffic to our commercial cloud host."
“Beginning on Sunday night at midnight, our analysis reveals that the FCC
was subject to multiple distributed denial-of-service attacks (DDos)," FCC
chief information officer David Bray said in a statement Monday.
"These were deliberate attempts by external actors to bombard the FCC’s
comment system with a high amount of traffic to our commercial cloud host."
“Anyone can hold the helm when the sea is calm.” - Publilius Syrus
CYBER SCOOP: WAS THE RECENT FLOOD OF TRAFFIC TO FCC'S WEBSITE ACTUALLY A DDOS
ATTACK?
It remains possible that the FCC’s website experienced difficulties Sunday night due to a
combination of both a DDoS attack and surge in legitimate users attempting to access the
comment section.
https://www.cyberscoop.com/recent-flood-traffic-fccs-website-actually-ddos-attack/
https://arstechnica.com/security/2017/05/microsofts-recent-success-in-blocking-in-the-wild-
attacks-is-eerily-good/
HELP NET SECURITY: CISCO PATCHES LEAKED 0-DAY IN 300+ OF ITS SWITCHES
Cisco has plugged a critical security hole in over 300 of its switches, and is urging users to
apply the patches as soon as possible because an exploit for it has been available for a month
now.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2017/05/10/cisco-switch-0day-patch/
KREBS ON SECURITY: EMERGENCY FIX FOR WINDOWS ANTI-MALWARE FLAW LEADS MAY’S
PATCH TUESDAY
Microsoft actually released an emergency update on Monday just hours ahead of today’s
regularly scheduled “Patch Tuesday” (the 2nd Tuesday of each month) to fix a dangerous flaw
present in most of Microsoft’s anti-malware technology that’s being called the worst Windows
bug in recent memory.
https://krebsonsecurity.com/2017/05/emergency-fix-for-windows-anti-malware-flaw-leads-
mays-patch-tuesday/
The new strategy, devised by A*STAR researchers of the Institute for Infocomm Research,
uses the conventional password as first step for authentication, but a second step uses the
whole history of the data exchanged between the IoT device and the server.
https://phys.org/news/2017-05-harnessing-potential-big-internet-devices.html
DARK READING: ANDROID APP PERMISSION IN GOOGLE PLAY CONTAINS SECURITY FLAW
Android's app permission mechanisms could allow malicious apps in Google Play to download
directly onto the device.
http://www.darkreading.com/mobile/android-app-permission-in-google-play-contains-
security-flaw/d/d-id/1328834?
A feature in Android used in 74 percent of ransomware will be fixed for the next version of the
Android operating system, Android O, which is expected to begin its roll out in August.
http://thehill.com/policy/cybersecurity/332699-android-flaw-used-in-74-of-ransomware-to-
be-fixed-in-august-september
According to Spencer, the county’s CodeRED system will disseminate information for
emergencies, such as severe weather, active shooter, utility outages and traffic, missing
persons, be-on-the-look-out and Amber Alerts and shelter locations.
https://gantdaily.com/2017/05/10/clearfield-co-to-implement-codered-emergency-
notification-system/
From: David Bray
To: Matthew Berry; Brian Hart
Subject: RE: question for you
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:50:00 PM
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:02 PM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: question for you
From: McKinnon, John [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:36 AM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: question for you
Hi again. I understand that the FCC did an internal analysis of the 4 million comments in the
Open Internet Order proceeding. I think one discovery was that a number of the comments
were probably filed by comment bots. I would really like to get this analysis or at least the
executive summary or the relevant portions. Please let me know if you can share it with me.
I have also asked the public affairs office about this.
Thanks very much,
John McKinnon
The Wall Street Journal
202 862 9217
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:29 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:21 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:20 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: FW: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: Margaret McGill [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:16 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: More on DDoS
Hey, is it possible to get this on the record (aka with a name attached)? My editors are
pushing for that.
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Mr Bray,
It has come to my attention that the FCC claims it was DDOS’d the other evening immediately
following a Public Service Announcement explaining what the current 17-108 filing actually does to
Title II assignments which included how to publicly comment on the filing.
either 1. there was a legitimate attack and data would be better handled by an independent
company to pinpoint the origins of the attack.
Or
2. The FCC is actively attempting to cover up a rush to comment on the 17-108 filing in an attempt to
delegitimize comments made during the timespan of the attack.
In either case, it is my opinion that the data logs be handed over to an independent third party for
analysis so the public can get a second opinion.
Best,
Joseph Skeate
From: Anita
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: Release Logs to Security Researcher
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2017 6:04:37 PM
Cheers,
Anita
On Wed, May 10, 2017 at 9:26 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
--
Best regards,
Anita I Kishore, PhD
--
Best regards,
Anita I Kishore, PhD
From: [email protected]
To: Anita
Subject: Re: Release Logs to Security Researcher
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 9:26:15 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
--
Best regards,
Anita I Kishore, PhD
From: Josh Cohen
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: Release of logs from DDoS attack for independent review
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 10:40:47 AM
Regards,
Josh Cohen
Please release the logs relating to the recent DDoS attack for independent review by security
analysts so that the public can be better informed on what transpired during this specific
event and can better understand the larger forces at play with respect to the ongoing net
neutrality debate.
Thank you,
Josh Cohen
Agility Engineering founder and concerned citizen
From: [email protected]
To: Josh Cohen
Subject: Re: Release of logs from DDoS attack for independent review
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 6:00:02 AM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
As a US citizen, I am highly alarmed by both the potential of an actual DDoS attack coordinated with mass citizen
use of the FCC comment page and the potential classification of a grass-roots citizen response to new FCC
policy/direction as merely a DDoS attack.
Please release the logs relating to the recent DDoS attack for independent review by security analysts so that the
public can be better informed on what transpired during this specific event and can better understand the larger
forces at play with respect to the ongoing net neutrality debate.
Thank you,
Josh Cohen
Agility Engineering founder and concerned citizen
From: David Bray
To: [email protected]; Greg Otto
Subject: FW: Request for comment/interview
Date: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 7:22:00 PM
Fyi… I made the case to our OMR to go ahead and do this, and so we thought something
would follow-up…
Hi Mark,
It's been a few days since we last reached out to OMR, and I wanted to see if the dust has
settled some and I could get the FCC's side on the DDoS/comment filing incident over the
weekend.
I've worked with David Bray, CC'd before, and I'd love the chance to chat with him on the
phone on the record, or if that's not possible, as not for direct attribution. We'd really like to
get something solid from the FCC on it.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield
Subject: RE: Request for comment/interview
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 12:49:00 PM
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Hi Mark,
It's been a few days since we last reached out to OMR, and I wanted to see if the dust has
settled some and I could get the FCC's side on the DDoS/comment filing incident over the
weekend.
I've worked with David Bray, CC'd before, and I'd love the chance to chat with him on the
phone on the record, or if that's not possible, as not for direct attribution. We'd really like to
get something solid from the FCC on it.
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:18 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Request for comment/interview
(b) (5)
Hi Mark,
It's been a few days since we last reached out to OMR, and I wanted to see if the dust has
settled some and I could get the FCC's side on the DDoS/comment filing incident over the
weekend.
I've worked with David Bray, CC'd before, and I'd love the chance to chat with him on the
phone on the record, or if that's not possible, as not for direct attribution. We'd really like to
get something solid from the FCC on it.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield
Subject: Re: Request for comment/interview
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:17:38 AM
(b) (5)
Hi Mark,
It's been a few days since we last reached out to OMR, and I wanted to see if the dust has
settled some and I could get the FCC's side on the DDoS/comment filing incident over the
weekend.
I've worked with David Bray, CC'd before, and I'd love the chance to chat with him on the
phone on the record, or if that's not possible, as not for direct attribution. We'd really like to
get something solid from the FCC on it.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
telecom industry’s long history of astroturfing and paying shady organizations to influence the
FCC, either of these scenarios should be concerning for anyone who cares about government
transparency, free speech, and the future of the Internet.
From: Andrew Nebus (CTR)
To: Erik Scheibert
Subject: RE: Stats -- completely unofficial ones
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52:19 AM
(b)
(5)
-----Original Message-----
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:48 AM
To: Andrew Nebus (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Stats -- completely unofficial ones
(b) (5)
On 5/10/17, 11:31 AM, someone claiming to be "David Bray" <[email protected]> wrote:
(b) (5)
(b)
(5)
From: [email protected]
To: Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Mark Savi; Uttam Kumar
Subject: Re: Stats -- completely unofficial ones
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:31:08 AM
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
To: Chance Snow
Subject: Re: Sunday"s DDoS Attack
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 4:54:42 PM
Yes individuals should use ECFS. However some groups are using ECFS in bulk vs. the
intended bulk filing mechanism -- making it harder for individuals to use the individual
mechanism. Hope this helps.
But that alternative submission system seems designed for the submission of comments in
bulk. From a usability perspective, it is extremely unrealistic to expect the wider public to be
able to submit a CSV file containing individual comments.
I implore you, the FCC, to release logs to an independent cyber security firm in order to
determine the extent that the purported DDoS attack on Sunday night affected the public's
ability to comment on FCC referenda.
Also, a public organization like this should most definitely felt deploy appropriate
commercial software that absolutely prevents these kinds of attacks in the private sector.
Best,
Chance Snow
From: [email protected]
To: Chance Snow
Subject: Re: Sunday"s DDoS Attack
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 4:43:56 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
I implore you, the FCC, to release logs to an independent cyber security firm in order to
determine the extent that the purported DDoS attack on Sunday night affected the public's
ability to comment on FCC referenda.
Also, a public organization like this should most definitely felt deploy appropriate commercial
software that absolutely prevents these kinds of attacks in the private sector.
Best,
Chance Snow
From: David Bray
To: Michael Conner
Subject: Re: The Alleged DDOS Attack on the FCC
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 10:28:33 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Also back in 2014 after all was finally over we did share comment volume and you'll see
250,000 a day were handled without issue at the end of the proceeding. Hope this helps.
FYI, I can’t currently get into my FCC email. I will hopefully be able to resolve this when I’m back in
DC.
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 12:25 PM
To: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: Douglas Logan
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 11:34 AM
To: 'David Bray' <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 11:31 AM
To: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 11:14 AM
To: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
On May 11, 2017, at 10:17, Douglas Logan <[email protected]> wrote:
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 9:36 AM
To: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b)
(5),
(b) (6)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 1:08 AM
To: Douglas Logan (CTR) <[email protected]>; Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 11:31 AM
To: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 11:14 AM
To: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
On May 11, 2017, at 10:17, Douglas Logan <[email protected]> wrote:
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 9:36 AM
To: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b)
(5),
(b) (6)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 9:09 AM
To: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 1:08 AM
To: Douglas Logan (CTR) <[email protected]>; Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5) .
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
(b) (5)
On May 11, 2017, at 10:17, Douglas Logan <[email protected]> wrote:
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 9:36 AM
To: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b)
(5),
(b) (6)
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 9:09 AM
To: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 1:08 AM
To: Douglas Logan (CTR) <[email protected]>; Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
(b)
(5),
(b) (6)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 9:09 AM
To: Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 1:08 AM
To: Douglas Logan (CTR) <[email protected]>; Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 1:08 AM
To: Douglas Logan (CTR) <[email protected]>; Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
(b) (5)
Thanks,
Doug Logan
CEO & Principal Consultant
Cyber Ninjas
(o) (941)-3-NINJAS
(c) (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2017 1:08 AM
To: Douglas Logan (CTR) <[email protected]>; Douglas Logan <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
.
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin
(CTR) <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist
<[email protected]>; John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa
<[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian
Hart <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian
Hart <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian
Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian
Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I
should still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long
it's lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I
should still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long
it's lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I
should still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long
it's lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 4:52 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin
(CTR) <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist
<[email protected]>; John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa
<[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I
should still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long
it's lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
From: Mark Wigfield
To: Matthew Berry; David Bray
Cc: Erik Scheibert; Brian Hart; Tony Summerlin (CTR); Neil Grace; Will Wiquist; John Skudlarek; Christine Calvosa;
Mark Stephens; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR)
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 5:57:14 PM
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 5:51 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Cc: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR)
<[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>;
John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 5:50 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Cc: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Neil Grace
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; John Skudlarek
<[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens
<[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 4:52 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin
(CTR) <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist
<[email protected]>; John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa
<[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
From: David Bray
To: Erik Scheibert; Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Subject: Fwd: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 5:45:44 PM
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 4:52 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin
(CTR) <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist
<[email protected]>; John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa
<[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR)
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
From: Mark Wigfield
To: David Bray
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:47:36 PM
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:46 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
From: [email protected]
To: Mark Wigfield
Subject: Re: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:45:41 PM
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
.
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
From: David Bray
To: Matthew Berry; Mark Wigfield; Brian Hart; Erik Scheibert
Cc: ITleadership; Mark Stephens
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:37:19 PM
Attachments: (b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
From: Matthew Berry
To: David Bray; Mark Wigfield; Brian Hart; Tony Summerlin (CTR); Erik Scheibert
Cc: John Skudlarek; Christine Calvosa; Mark Stephens; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR)
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32:57 PM
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert
<[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark
Stephens <[email protected]>; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield; Matthew Berry; Brian Hart; Tony Summerlin (CTR); Erik Scheibert
Cc: John Skudlarek; Christine Calvosa; Mark Stephens; Venkat Veeramneni (CTR)
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:32:16 PM
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:02 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
From: David Bray
To: Matthew Berry; Mark Wigfield; Brian Hart; Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Cc: John Skudlarek; Erik Scheibert; Christine Calvosa; Mark Stephens
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:11:23 PM
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 3:11 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:47 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: John Skudlarek <[email protected]>; Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine
Calvosa <[email protected]>; Mark Stephens <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34 PM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:18 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 12:33 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: Two press outlets having ECFS problems
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Make, Jonathan
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:52 AM
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: still problems with ECFS
Hi gentlemen.
Sorry to keep bothering you about this, but a tech and a PR question.
David, I can go ahead and submit a formal email as you instructed. Just wanted to make sure I should
still do that before doing it.
We are still having the problems I mentioned earlier with ECFS, they have been consistent.
We're not able to see all filings I've been made on ECFS, something about the system seems not to
be working.
And right now, through both Firefox and IE, we cannot even access anything in ECFS. It will not
conduct a search for us along any lines.
So the PR question is, can the FCC say on the record if it is trying to fix this problem, for how long it's
lasted and what is causing it?
We will have a news brief on this in tonight's issue.
Thanks.
Jonathan
From: Spencer Hachmeister
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: What"s up with this?
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34:31 PM
David,
I'm sorry your job makes you lie to the public. I'm having a hard time handling the
changes in America as it is, and I can only imagine how much worse it would be to
have your job be right in the center of it. Right now, we as a country really need people
like you, with bosses telling you to lie, to stand up for the truth. I don't claim to know
what's keeping you quiet, and that's ok. Just know, my heart goes out to you.
Sincerely,
Spencer Hachmeister
On Wed, May 10, 2017 at 12:26 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
At this point it’s probably best to talk to the Office of Media Relations, as mentioned, I’m focused
on keeping the different mechanisms open as much as possible for anyone and everyone to file.
Any groups concerned with being able to file can also use the bulk mechanism for file uploads that
has always been available at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments which is similar
to what was done in 2014 as well. Hope this helps.
On Wed, May 10, 2017 at 12:19 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Alright, I'll go ahead and contact them. In the mean time, as the CIO, you get a
front and center view of what happened. Do you believe it was a DDoS attack or
that the servers where overwhelmed?
Thanks, again!
Spencer
On Wed, May 10, 2017 at 12:09 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
As you can imagine they’ve got lots of questions on all sides, here’s their contact info:
https://www.fcc.gov/media-relations
David,
Thanks for the quick response. Who should I contact in Media Relations, and
what is their contact information?
Thanks again,
Spencer
On Wed, May 10, 2017 at 11:55 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Thank you for your inquiry, the FCC Office of Media Relations would be the best point of
contact. As CIO I’m focused on keeping the different mechanisms open as much as possible
for anyone and everyone to file. We do have a bulk mechanism for file uploads that has
always been available at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
Please explain.
UPDATE: The FCC is now claiming that it was also hit by a DDoS attack back
in 2014, the last time John Oliver did a segment about net neutrality. This
makes me even more skeptical. These are serious claims -- they need to
show us the proof. The only way we'll know what really happened is if the
FCC released their logs to an independent party who can verify their claims.
UPDATE 2: Now we are pretty sure the FCC is lying. Our software dev has
confirmed that the FCC's site went down again last night around 8:30pm
EST, shortly after the John Oliver segment would have aired again on HBO.
He also confirmed that their servers repeatedly fell down under net neutrality
comments coming through BattleForTheNet.com over the last two weeks. It
seems extremely likely the FCC is attempting to cover up the fact that their
comment system simply cannot handle large amounts of feedback from the
public.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) just issued a press
release claiming, “Beginning on Sunday night at midnight, our analysis
reveals that the FCC was subject to multiple distributed denial-of-service
attacks (DDoS).”
The FCC is saying that the site hosting their comment system was
attacked at the exact same time comments would have started flooding in
from John Oliver’s viral Last Week Tonight segment about net neutrality. The
media widely reported that the surge in comments crashed the FCC’s site.
Disclosure: I am a a net neutrality activist and I work for Fight for the
Future one of the groups behind BattleForTheNet.com. I have been paying
close attention to the issue since 2014, and have been part of efforts
that overwhelmed the FCC’s comment site in the past.
The FCC’s statement today raises two concerns for me. It strikes me that
either:
1. The FCC is being intentionally misleading, and trying to claim that the
surge in traffic from large numbers of people attempting to access their site
through John Oliver’s GoFCCYourself.com redirect amounts to a “DDoS”
attack, to let themselves off the hook for essentially silencing large numbers
of people by not having a properly functioning site to receive comments from
the public about an important issue, or—worst case—is preparing a bogus
legal argument that somehow John Oliver’s show itself was the DDoS attack.
2. Someone actually did DDoS the FCC’s site at the exact same time as John
Oliver’s segment, in order to actively prevent people from being able to
comment in support of keeping the Title II net neutrality rules many of us
fought for in 2015.
Given the current FCC chairman Ajit Pai’s open hostility toward net neutrality,
and the telecom industry’s long history of astroturfing and paying shady
organizations to influence the FCC, either of these scenarios should be
concerning for anyone who cares about government transparency, free
speech, and the future of the Internet.
One thing that we can do right now is call for the FCC to release its logs to
independent security analysts so that we know what actually happened. The
public has a right to know. You can email the FCC’s Chief Information Officer
asking for them to do this at [email protected] or call 202-418-2020
From: Mark Wigfield
To: Timothy Strachan; Matthew Berry; David Bray
Subject: RE: Wyden, Schatz Ask FCC For Details of Reported Cyberattack
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 3:45:57 PM
(b)
(5)
From: Timothy Strachan
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 3:33 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Wyden, Schatz Ask FCC For Details of Reported Cyberattack
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 3:31 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Timothy Strachan <[email protected]>; David
Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Wyden, Schatz Ask FCC For Details of Reported Cyberattack
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 3:30 PM
To: Timothy Strachan <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>;
David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Wyden, Schatz Ask FCC For Details of Reported Cyberattack
(b)
(5)
From: Harper Neidig [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 3:22 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: Wyden, Schatz Ask FCC For Details of Reported Cyberattack
5. Did the DDoS attacks prevent the public from being able to submit
comments through the FCC’s website? If so, do you have an estimate of how
many individuals were unable to access the FCC website or submit comments
during the attacks? Were any comments lost or otherwise affected?
7. Does the FCC have all of the resources and expertise it needs in order
to combat attacks like those that occurred on May 8?
###
--
Harper Neidig
Staff Writer
The Hill
Office: 202.628.8526
Cell: (b) (6)
From: David A. Bray
To: Michael Krigsman
Cc: David Bray
Subject: Re: Zack from ZDnet
Date: Sunday, May 21, 2017 6:04:07 PM
10-4 and many thanks Michael. The last hour's exchange was interesting -- I agree with you
100% that they're blowing smoke and then rushing to claim fire where there is none.
I'm striving my best to stay away from the policy/politics and remain non-partisan. Contrary to
that one person's perceptions, I think most of the public would want their IT to be intentionally
non-partisan here.
On Sun, May 21, 2017 at 4:38 PM, Michael Krigsman <[email protected]> wrote:
I would get Mark to send him an email saying he wants to review factual issues with Zack,
which Zack will definitely resist. In addition, I would say that the innuendo also implies
dimensions to the attack that simply do not exist. If Zack refuses to write a correction, then I
would send an email to Larry Dignan. Mark should also say something to the effect that his
falls below the standard of factual reporting we expect from ZDNet and that, as a whole, it
creates a misleading impression.
Yes, he asked for my notes, but I do not think there was anything confidential in my notes.
On Sun, May 21, 2017 at 4:12 PM, David A. Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
1. Opening statement: "critics say prevented a flood of people from leaving
messages on the agency's support of net neutrality." As you know and I know this
was between 1am-8:45am ET Monday morning. And there was the bulk upload
mechanism that was always available for individuals too. So the first statement is
dubious. It also misses that we did successfully receive 2 million+ comments in 10
days vs. 2 million+ in 110 days back in 2014.
2. Then he says: "In unprinted remarks, he said that the logs amounted to about 1
gigabyte per hour during the alleged attack." -- was that him using what you
shared? Did he reuse your notes?
3. He references FftF, a pro net neutrality group saying ""If the fake comments --
many of which are using real people's names and addresses without their
permission -- were submitted using the FCC's API, that means they should
absolutely have information about who is committing this act of fraud" -- when (1)
nothing in ECFS asks to verify identify, (2) they seem to still be referencing the
2014 not cloud-based site, and (3) pro-neutrality groups also did bulk 105,000+
comments in 2014 http://blog.texifter.com/index.php/2014/08/06/open-data-on-net-
neutrality-help-crowd-source-analysis-of-comments-to-the-fcc/
The FftF group he quotes extensively also apparently think it is perfectly okay to
bombard people's real life neighborhoods *too* https://www.theverge.com
/platform/amp/2017/5/8/15577988/ajit-pai-protest-door-hangers-fcc-net-neutrality-
proposal
From: Gabe Strenke
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net Neutrality
Date: Friday, May 19, 2017 12:59:22 AM
Hello, firstly I would just like to say, Congrats on becoming the first Indian American FCC
chairman! Secondly, why are you trying to destroy net neutrality? No one, except people who
are confused as to if net neutrality is good or bad, thinks that killing net neutrality is a good
idea. There are far too many cons to getting rid of net neutrality then keeping it. Also, I don't
believe for a second that someone DDoS attacked you, because there has still yet to be any
evidence of that, probably because you guys hope that comment will be swept under the rug,
but this whole administration is full of liars and It's gotten to the point where I can't even trust
random politicians that I heard about watching YT (like you). I hope you reverse your decision
and decide to keep net neutrality because for years my family and I have been put through hell
with our ISP. We get throttled every so often, they then claim we aren't, we get charged for a
full month of service, even if we only had internet access for 20/30 days, even if it was 100%
their fault, we still 100% of the money for 60% of the product. So many American's,
especially older generations, have basically no knowledge on current technology and many of
them hang on every word you guys say. So when you blatantly lie to American's by trying to
say that getting rid of net neutrality is somehow a good thing for consumers (which everyone
knows it isn't), I get angry and I sometimes vent online, normally unproductively, but I do
hope that either you personally or an unpaid intern reads this because this is one of the most
important issues right now, but it's being shadowed by the orangutang in the big house. I know
I will probably just get some standard email back, I probably won't even get one actually, but I
believe this issue worth my time of writing this and I hope something comes from it. I really
hope you don't just disregard this whole thing because of what I'm about to say, but this is
American and I will say whatever I want to you. I don't like you, you're clearly doing this for
money, no one that is against net neutrality is doing it because they think net neutrality is
horrible for the American people, it's always money. I know you say it's because you think the
current regulations are somehow "too" constraining on ISPs, are you joking? I honestly almost
laughed at that comment when I heard it, and you, like every other anti-net neutrality person,
you really really struggle to find pros for getting rid of net neutrality, because the cons far
outweigh the pros, mid-argument I've seen anti-net neutrality people say something beneficial
about keeping it, and they immediately retract their statement. Please, I'm begging you, the
FCC, whoever is listening/reading this, stop this BS.
From: Jake K
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Questions
Date: Thursday, May 18, 2017 9:36:03 PM
I gotta ask Ajit, first and foremost: are you as big of a stupid baby as you seem? Last time the
FCC tried to hand over the internet to corporations, they got millions of calls and emails. Yet
you think THIS time when you do it, its a "DDoS?" You're either a liar or you should resign
right now, because you're obviously too stupid to put 2 and 2 together and therefore shouldn't
be in charge of ANYTHING. WE THE PEOPLE want you to stop selling out to corporations.
Your bullshit fake rhetoric isn't working.
Your stupid arguments about "reversing Obama's decisions" aren't working - we all know
Obama's decision was to STOP THIS EXACT THING FROM HAPPENING. You know,
since, AGAIN, the last time this happened under the last corporate bitch that had your
position, we showed how angry we were at it. So even Barack "literally picked my cabinet
based on Citigroup recommendations" Obama had to go against the corporations for once -
and you think its a SMART argument to be proud about reversing the decision we demanded?
You're an idiot Ajit. Whether you're lying or not, that much is clear, a smart man wouldn't
have made the arguments you've made, or even attempted to sell the internet to the highest
bidder again.
From: Tim Lawrence
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net Neutrality
Date: Thursday, May 18, 2017 5:03:42 PM
I'm Tim Lawrence, a registered voter in the state of Utah who is in support of keeping net
neutrality, which you are ceaselessly trying to attack and repeal for your own gains. As one of
the vast majority that wishes to keep net neutrality intact, I implore you to reconsider your
decision to exploit your power and not listen to the people of this great nation. This is not
Dancing with the Stars, you are correct. This is the United States of America, a country built
on freedom and the voices of people within it. I do not know of a single person who supports
doing away with Net Neutrality, aside from the politicians who are continuously returning to
the fight against net neutrality, against freedom, and against the American people. We will not
sit idly by while you take the fate of our internet into your own dictatorial hands. Please,
during this 4 month 'comment period', actually read through some of the thousands of
comments that I'm sure are already flooding your inboxes, voicemails, etc., and realize that we
are NOT bots, we are NOT a DDOS attack. We are the American people, and we love the
internet and we will fight for it every day, every hour, every waking moment to keep it from
becoming even more of a corporate oligopoly controlling politics for selfish gains. We will
not back down. Net neutrality will continue on. Not just for the American people, but for all
the people of the world demanding the United States not make a fool of themselves again in
their political choices.
If you have actually read my messages, thank you for your time, Mr. Pai. Again, I implore
you to reconsider the decisions made today. Otherwise it will be a long winter in Washington.
Regards,
Timothy Lawrence
allegations being made that you are hiding important details from the public in an attempt to
make the FCC be looked at as a victim, or that someone executed this Ddos attack in an
attempt to silence the voices of those who sent messages in favor of net neutrality.
If you release these logs, and if no evidence is found of any form of dishonesty or trickery,
all of this trouble could vanish. On the other hand, if you continue to be dishonest to the
public in this way, distrust will grow. People will assume negative things about the FCC,
and even about your personal business practices. This is in no way a threat, but just an idle
observation of how the human mind works. We, as a species, crave information. When we
don't have that information, many will tend to fill in the blank with something that may not
be exactly true.
If people know the truth, all of these assumptions could stop. If you're innocent, all of this
can blow over. If you're guilty of some sort of trickery on the public, I think we all know
you wouldn't want people to know that, so what you do right now answers our question for
us. If you refuse, everyone will know that there is, in fact, something that the FCC has done
that is not for the good of the people, and that all of you have been incredibly 'shady' these
past few weeks in your practices.
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield; Mark Stephens; Brian Hart
Subject: Fwd: FCC Integrity Concerns
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 10:44:06 PM
A sign that if you provide some basic facts, you might not win them all however you will
defuse some.
Thanks for your time. My apologies for coming off a bit rough, but the situation seemed a bit
different with the somewhat limited knowledge I had at the time. This cleared up a lot of
misconceptions that I had about the situation. Again, my apologies for being so rude when all I
had to do was conduct a bit more research beforehand.
On Sat, May 13, 2017 at 4:28 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
The logs have massive amounts of personal IP addresses associated with the comments filed
that the public did not give consent to share publicly and even if we do our best to scrub
there still might be something there that someone did not agree to have shared.
One, the site did not go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two, there has
always been an alternative easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-
comments to file comments from should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high
traffic. Three, we have noticed some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual
mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially
making it difficult for individuals to file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-
service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-1494533379
If you release these logs, and if no evidence is found of any form of dishonesty or trickery,
all of this trouble could vanish. On the other hand, if you continue to be dishonest to the
public in this way, distrust will grow. People will assume negative things about the FCC,
and even about your personal business practices. This is in no way a threat, but just an idle
observation of how the human mind works. We, as a species, crave information. When we
don't have that information, many will tend to fill in the blank with something that may not
be exactly true.
If people know the truth, all of these assumptions could stop. If you're innocent, all of this
can blow over. If you're guilty of some sort of trickery on the public, I think we all know
you wouldn't want people to know that, so what you do right now answers our question for
us. If you refuse, everyone will know that there is, in fact, something that the FCC has done
that is not for the good of the people, and that all of you have been incredibly 'shady' these
past few weeks in your practices.
From: David Bray
To: Greg Otto; [email protected]
Subject: FW: FCC claims DDoS attacks after HBO show calls out net neutrality rollbacks, and more.
Date: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 7:24:00 PM
From: Billy Mitchell [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:28 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FCC claims DDoS attacks after HBO show calls out net neutrality rollbacks, and more.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 10:21 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Yes it might be good to ask again now as everyone has more bandwidth... folks were busy here.
Offer to do it on background as a phone call and you can indicate that you and I have worked together in the past. If
you want, you can even send a separate email to [email protected] and cc me (separate title, etc.) and I can
provide chime in that this would be good for the public. Hope this helps.
Hi David,
We did quite early on and received a "decline to comment," which our story reflects.
Thanks,
Billy
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 10:13 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Billy, have you contacted our Office of Media Relations/Mark Wigfield? That would be the best path to first try
for an on the record or even a background?
-d.
Subject: Re: FCC claims DDoS attacks after HBO show calls out net neutrality rollbacks, and more.
Hey David,
Thanks for sticking with us through this. We want to be as fair as possible with all this, and would love to get
something on the record, or at least on the record but not for direct attribution to tell FCC's side of it. To this point,
though, we haven't been able to.
Best,
Billy
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 12:31 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Off the record -- I am still concerned this "claim" issue was playing into the hands of a certain political advocacy
group, I am also surprised folks haven't pieced together that if there were lots of bots submitting the same
messages over and over (at speeds much faster than humans) then yes that could have tied up the API and denied
service to humans also using the website with the same API, i.e., a DDoS. Google the Pokémon Go attack if you
are not familiar with this form of denial of service; a DDoS doesn't have to use DarkWeb machines to deny
service, commercial cloud vendors hosting bots will work just as well.
Fortunately this news outlet did piece the cyber-related puzzle pieces together this
evening: https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-
1494533379
Which incidentally was an off-the-record story I told to Wyatt Kash weeks ago when I was at SxSW, before this
event, about what also happened in 2014 if you want to verify.
Best regards,
-d.
Right now OMR has been designated as the official on-the-record conduit.
Chris can ask OMR more specific questions and if we can share we will -- the one challenge is if he asks about the
specific type of attack or operational details we can't share that until it's over because they might use what we
share we know (and don't appear to know) to morph the attacks. If Chris wants to ask off-the-record by email
feel free with the same caveats above.
Hi David,
Thanks again for reaching out. Any chance you could talk to our reporter Chris Bing (cc'd here) off-the-record
about this? Of course we'll reach out to OMR about anything on-the-record, but Chris has some more specific
questions that he hopes you might be able to clarify more immediately off the record.
Thanks!
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
Feel free to ask OMR about whether a similar DDoS happened in 2014, as I believe both Politico and WSJ
have asked and gotten the correct info (they also sorted that the group had the wrong year for when the Open
Internet proceeding happened).
Off the record when a DDoS happens -- and in this case is still being attempted even now -- several of us are
more focused on responding to that event; so depending on when you asked OMR they may have been rather
busy or IT staff weren't available to share details at that time.
Hi David,
Thanks for the background on all of this; it certainly helps. It's not our intent to do anything but tell an accurate
story. Yesterday one of our reporters contacted the FCC press staff and they declined to comment on what he
and we thought were valid questions. With that, we did the best we could to be fair to the FCC given your
statement and the other contextual information of the show and the advocacy group.
If it's possible to talk more about it on the record and to update and reflect that in the story, we'd be more than
happy to do so with more context from the your office.
Please let me know. I'm happy to jump on a call at any time today.
Best,
Billy
Just a heads-up as I have done earlier articles with FedScoop and off the record, the group that
claimed folks fought for Open Internet were wrong about it occurring in 2015. The 14-28 (Open
Internet) proceeding was in 2014.
Also off-the-record, yes -- there was a similar DDoS attack after the 2014 J.O. clip. We later
released the total count of comments received to show this without saying this. Specifically his
video at the time in June 2014 only increased the rate from 5,000 a day to 25,000 a day. Yet we
had issues because of a parallel DDoS. Later when the proceeding neared the end we were able to
accept 250,000 proceedings with our issue because a DDoS attack wasn't coinciding.
At the time the Chairman did not want to say there was a DDoS attack out of concern of copycats.
So we accepted the punches that it somehow crashed because of volume even though actual
comment volume wasn't an issue. Counts from the 2014 proceeding by day are
here https://www fcc.gov/news-events/blog/2014/09/17/update-volume-open-internet-comments-
submitted-fcc
Activist groups like to create news. Yesterday we only got about 100,000 comments -- which if
we can accept 250,000 comments without issue should tell you something about that group's
claims.
Hope this helps as background because your story is a tad leaning to the other group without
checking their claims -- to include incorrectly getting the date when all this actually happened?
Best regards,
-d.
Lawmakers have an idea for how OPM can hire more cybersecurity pros.
Fyi… I made the case to our OMR to go ahead and do this, and so we thought something
would follow-up…
Hi Mark,
It's been a few days since we last reached out to OMR, and I wanted to see if the dust has
settled some and I could get the FCC's side on the DDoS/comment filing incident over the
weekend.
I've worked with David Bray, CC'd before, and I'd love the chance to chat with him on the
phone on the record, or if that's not possible, as not for direct attribution. We'd really like to
get something solid from the FCC on it.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
To: Greg Otto
Cc: Billy Mitchell; [email protected]; [email protected]; Goldy Kamali
Subject: RE: Following up from Friday
Date: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 3:41:02 PM
Hi Greg,
Many thanks. If there are specific quotes that Billy wants to use on the record, OMR left that door
open to identify. Just so you know, the group has been sending not-so-friendly emails and phone
calls to me throughout all of last week because someone opted to post my email and phone number
on Reddit, that’s why we’re also concerned.
It
From: Greg Otto [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 3:22 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Cc: Billy Mitchell <[email protected]>; [email protected];
[email protected]; Goldy Kamali <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Following up from Friday
Hi David —
I’m gonna chime in here — apologies for not adding perspective last week, as I was out on
paternity leave.
We can remove the DDoS sentence at the end of the story. Really doesn’t add to the story,
regardless of where the definition comes from.
Furthermore, I appreciate the references for how this all played out. We can amend the story at
the bottom to say there are multiple reports out there that say it looks like bots powered by
commercial cloud providers were the cause of the disruption.
I understand the sensitive nature of the story — we wouldn’t ever want you to share PII or
other sensitive IT functions — but I would stress that going on the record about what
happened would be extremely worthwhile.
I would even posit giving you the option to write a first-person article for us on how your IT
shop handled this — or what agencies can do in the future to defend against hacktivism /
DDoS attacks that are motivated by political causes. I truly think thats worthwhile for both
FedScoop and CyberScoop.
Feel free to reach to me at the number below if you have any other questions or concerns.
Regards,
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 10:04 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Billy and Chris,
Hope you both are doing well. Is there going to be a follow-up from our discussion on Friday
w/ Billy?
For Chris' article, I am concerned that the 'cyber expert' referenced was someone looking
solely on the DarkWeb -- when nowhere in the definition of a DDoS does it say it has to
originate from the DarkWeb. That was misleading to the audience and it would have been
good to question the expert if a DDoS has to originate from infected bots -- it does not. Also,
claiming that our definition differs from other experts was also misleading as what I shared
with you was a definition outside of our agency -- from the top search result if you ask
Google "What is DDoS"? That should be corrected.
http://www.digitalattackmap.com/understanding-ddos/
As mentioned, the Pokemon Go DDoS attack is the best analogy for what happened here --
in this case using commercial cloud services which made it even harder to address real
comment bots vs. bots just throwing junk data at us.
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/gaming/pokemon-go-down-
servers-ddos-attack-hackers-poodlecorp-game-unavailable-a7140811.html
https://techcrunch.com/2016/07/17/ourmine-attacks-pokemon-go-servers/
Finally, even Brian Krebs when he had his massive DDoS directed at him refrained from
releasing the logs. Off the record we've chatted with him since these events. As discussed
with Billy on Friday, there's way too much private information that folks did not give
permission to FCC to release as well as operationally sensitive info there -- we're not alone
in that position as almost every CIO or CISO would have the same concerns. Off the record,
certain groups have sent tweets that show they're (1) using bots, and (2) that they're
searching for vulnerabilities:
This is an example of a group using bots to submit comments via the API (vs. having humans
go to the website directly) -- and what they're finding is there is a rate limit for the API as
mentioned to Billy on Friday:
https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/861962863245742084
And this is an example of the group either sending junk data to the API or doing recon on
the system to find potential exploits. This was on Thursday, when no one else had issues
and in fact it was the highest day on record ever for the FCC at more than 400,000
comments: https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/862714335075893250
Per one of our internal experts that looked at the screenshot that group sent:
-d.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:08 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Update, I see Billy’s tied-up, understand and will stand by. Many thanks.
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:08 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Billy Mitchell
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Dr. Bray
Now is good.
Sorry Mark,
Mark
202-418-0253
--
Greg Otto
Managing Editor - CyberScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
610.223.4586
Twitter: @gregotto
From: Frank Konkel
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: Re: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 2:11:32 PM
Thanks David.
One question: Any idea and how much bandwidth the attackers used to paralyze the site? I've
seen estimates of other attacks in the hundreds of megs/sec range, but any idea here?
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 1:06 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
My apologies Mark, sorry I just got this message -- Frank asked for the link to the bulk
upload solution, here it is: https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
Also Frank, on background here is the link to info on the Pokémon Go DDoS attacks: Akin
to the Pokemon attack: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/
gaming/pokemon-go-down-servers-ddos-attack-hackers-poodlecorp-game-unavailable-
a7140811.html which also targeted an API with lots of It traffic; the difference here is this
wasn't using DarkWeb bots this was using commercial cloud services to host the bots
causing the denial of service which made it harder to remedy.
As noted on the call for those members of the public who are concerned: One, the site did
not go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two, there has always been an
alternative easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file
comments if groups happen to find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. Three, we
have noticed some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual mechanism
(ECFS) to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially making it
difficult for individuals to file.
And as mentioned Thursday was our highest day of comments ever, more than 400,000 --
which shows when there aren't additional variables present the cloud based system can scale
to receive them all.
-d.
I just accidentally cut myself off – David can patch me back in unless I cut you both off already.
418-0253
Talk soon
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
1210 works!
Should I call you or you call me? If you want to call me, I will be at (b) (6)
Let me know!
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:34 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Completely understand and I could do 1210pm-1230pm today if that works for Mark as
well? Or later this afternoon after 4:30pm?
Many thanks.
Sorry about that, I was on the road already when it looks like Mark called my office
phone Friday. Can we set something up for today or tomorrow?
-Frank
(I'll be at home office this morning at (b) (6) if you have any questions)
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:02 PM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
Frank Konkel here at Government Executive. Thought I'd reach out to see about
setting up a background chat with David to discuss the FCC's response to the DDoS
attacks earlier this week.
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to
release activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks,
and we've been reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and
perhaps some details can shed light on what really happened here and how you might
try to mitigate similar issues in the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
-Frank
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield; Frank Konkel
Subject: Re: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 1:06:37 PM
My apologies Mark, sorry I just got this message -- Frank asked for the link to the bulk upload
solution, here it is: https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
Also Frank, on background here is the link to info on the Pokémon Go DDoS attacks: Akin to
the Pokemon attack: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-
tech/gaming/pokemon-go-down-servers-ddos-attack-hackers-poodlecorp-game-unavailable-
a7140811.html which also targeted an API with lots of It traffic; the difference here is this
wasn't using DarkWeb bots this was using commercial cloud services to host the bots causing
the denial of service which made it harder to remedy.
As noted on the call for those members of the public who are concerned: One, the site did not
go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two, there has always been an alternative
easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file comments if
groups happen to find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. Three, we have noticed
some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual mechanism (ECFS) to file
comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially making it difficult for individuals
to file.
And as mentioned Thursday was our highest day of comments ever, more than 400,000 --
which shows when there aren't additional variables present the cloud based system can scale to
receive them all.
-d.
I just accidentally cut myself off – David can patch me back in unless I cut you both off already. 418-
0253
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 15, 2017 12:09 PM
To: Frank Konkel <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Background chat on FCC website issues?
I am at 202.418.2020 for the call.
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: Mark Wigfield
To: David Bray; Frank Konkel
Subject: RE: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 12:14:06 PM
I just accidentally cut myself off – David can patch me back in unless I cut you both off already. 418-
0253
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 15, 2017 12:09 PM
To: Frank Konkel <[email protected]>
Cc: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Background chat on FCC website issues?
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
1210 works!
Should I call you or you call me? If you want to call me, I will be at (b) (6)
Let me know!
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:34 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Completely understand and I could do 1210pm-1230pm today if that works for Mark as
well? Or later this afternoon after 4:30pm?
Many thanks.
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:02 PM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
Frank, will let you know shortly
From: Frank Konkel [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:23 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: Background chat on FCC website issues?
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to release
activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks, and we've
been reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and perhaps
some details can shed light on what really happened here and how you might try to
mitigate similar issues in the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile:(b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: David Bray
To: Frank Konkel
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: Re: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 12:09:30 PM
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
1210 works!
Should I call you or you call me? If you want to call me, I will be at (b) (6)
Let me know!
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:34 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Completely understand and I could do 1210pm-1230pm today if that works for Mark as
well? Or later this afternoon after 4:30pm?
Many thanks.
-Frank
(I'll be at home office this morning at 231 519 0684 if you have any questions)
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:02 PM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
Frank Konkel here at Government Executive. Thought I'd reach out to see about setting
up a background chat with David to discuss the FCC's response to the DDoS attacks
earlier this week.
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to release
activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks, and we've
been reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and perhaps some
details can shed light on what really happened here and how you might try to mitigate
similar issues in the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
-Frank
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: Frank Konkel
To: Mark Wigfield
Cc: David Bray
Subject: Re: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 11:39:00 AM
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
1210 works!
Should I call you or you call me? If you want to call me, I will be at (b) (6)
Let me know!
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:34 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Completely understand and I could do 1210pm-1230pm today if that works for Mark as
well? Or later this afternoon after 4:30pm?
Many thanks.
Sorry about that, I was on the road already when it looks like Mark called my office
phone Friday. Can we set something up for today or tomorrow?
-Frank
(I'll be at home office this morning at 231 519 0684 if you have any questions)
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:02 PM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
Frank Konkel here at Government Executive. Thought I'd reach out to see about setting
up a background chat with David to discuss the FCC's response to the DDoS attacks
earlier this week.
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to release
activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks, and we've
been reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and perhaps some
details can shed light on what really happened here and how you might try to mitigate
similar issues in the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
-Frank
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile:(b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: Mark Wigfield
To: Frank Konkel; David Bray
Subject: RE: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 11:38:04 AM
1210 works!
Should I call you or you call me? If you want to call me, I will be at (b) (6)
Let me know!
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:34 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Completely understand and I could do 1210pm-1230pm today if that works for Mark as
well? Or later this afternoon after 4:30pm?
Many thanks.
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:02 PM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to release
activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks, and we've
been reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and perhaps some
details can shed light on what really happened here and how you might try to mitigate
similar issues in the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: Frank Konkel
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: Re: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 11:37:29 AM
1210 works!
Should I call you or you call me? If you want to call me, I will be at (b) (6)
Let me know!
On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 11:34 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Completely understand and I could do 1210pm-1230pm today if that works for Mark as
well? Or later this afternoon after 4:30pm?
Many thanks.
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:02 PM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
Frank Konkel here at Government Executive. Thought I'd reach out to see about setting up
a background chat with David to discuss the FCC's response to the DDoS attacks earlier
this week.
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to release
activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks, and we've
been reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and perhaps some
details can shed light on what really happened here and how you might try to mitigate
similar issues in the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
-Frank
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: David Bray
To: Frank Konkel
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: Re: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 11:34:23 AM
Completely understand and I could do 1210pm-1230pm today if that works for Mark as well?
Or later this afternoon after 4:30pm?
Many thanks.
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:02 PM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
Frank Konkel here at Government Executive. Thought I'd reach out to see about setting up a
background chat with David to discuss the FCC's response to the DDoS attacks earlier this
week.
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to release
activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks, and we've been
reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and perhaps some details
can shed light on what really happened here and how you might try to mitigate similar issues
in the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
-Frank
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile:(b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: Frank Konkel
To: Mark Wigfield
Cc: David Bray
Subject: Re: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 11:31:27 AM
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 2:02 PM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
Frank Konkel here at Government Executive. Thought I'd reach out to see about setting up a
background chat with David to discuss the FCC's response to the DDoS attacks earlier this
week.
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to release
activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks, and we've been
reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and perhaps some details
can shed light on what really happened here and how you might try to mitigate similar issues
in the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
-Frank
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: David Bray
Subject: Testimony on the importance of communication...
Date: Sunday, May 14, 2017 11:46:03 PM
Testimony to if you do communicate in the long-run there is the opportunity for better
understanding.
No worries and always happy to help. I wish I could do more to help get the word
out within the limits of my public service role -- and I'm also happy to help when
anyone asks a question.
-d.
On Sat, May 13, 2017 at 4:28 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media
Relations. The logs have massive amounts of personal IP addresses associated
with the comments filed that the public did not give consent to share publicly
and even if we do our best to scrub there still might be something there that
someone did not agree to have shared.
One, the site did not go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two,
there has always been an alternative easy to use website
at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file comments from
should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. Three, we have
noticed some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual
mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above,
potentially making it difficult for individuals to file. https://www.wsj.com/
articles/bots-denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-
1494533379
If you release these logs, and if no evidence is found of any form of dishonesty
or trickery, all of this trouble could vanish. On the other hand, if you continue to
be dishonest to the public in this way, distrust will grow. People will assume
negative things about the FCC, and even about your personal business
practices. This is in no way a threat, but just an idle observation of how the
human mind works. We, as a species, crave information. When we don't have
that information, many will tend to fill in the blank with something that may not
be exactly true.
If people know the truth, all of these assumptions could stop. If you're
innocent, all of this can blow over. If you're guilty of some sort of trickery on
the public, I think we all know you wouldn't want people to know that, so what
you do right now answers our question for us. If you refuse, everyone will know
that there is, in fact, something that the FCC has done that is not for the good
of the people, and that all of you have been incredibly 'shady' these past few
weeks in your practices.
From: Benn Konsynski
To: David Bray
Cc: (b) (6) Lerner, Jennifer
Subject: Re: A good ending...
Date: Sunday, May 14, 2017 10:34:23 PM
Hi Jessi,
No worries and always happy to help. I wish I could do more to help get the word
out within the limits of my public service role -- and I'm also happy to help when
anyone asks a question.
-d.
On Sat, May 13, 2017 at 4:28 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media
Relations. The logs have massive amounts of personal IP addresses associated
with the comments filed that the public did not give consent to share publicly
and even if we do our best to scrub there still might be something there that
someone did not agree to have shared.
One, the site did not go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two,
there has always been an alternative easy to use website
at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file comments from
should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. Three, we have
noticed some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual
mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above,
potentially making it difficult for individuals to file. https://www.wsj.com/
articles/bots-denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-
1494533379
If you release these logs, and if no evidence is found of any form of dishonesty
or trickery, all of this trouble could vanish. On the other hand, if you continue to
be dishonest to the public in this way, distrust will grow. People will assume
negative things about the FCC, and even about your personal business
practices. This is in no way a threat, but just an idle observation of how the
human mind works. We, as a species, crave information. When we don't have
that information, many will tend to fill in the blank with something that may not
be exactly true.
If people know the truth, all of these assumptions could stop. If you're
innocent, all of this can blow over. If you're guilty of some sort of trickery on
the public, I think we all know you wouldn't want people to know that, so what
you do right now answers our question for us. If you refuse, everyone will know
that there is, in fact, something that the FCC has done that is not for the good
of the people, and that all of you have been incredibly 'shady' these past few
weeks in your practices.
From: Diane Morrison
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: A good ending...
Date: Sunday, May 14, 2017 10:26:44 PM
yay!
On Sun, May 14, 2017 at 10:24 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Testimony to if you do communicate in the long-run there is the opportunity for better
understanding.
Hi Jessi,
No worries and always happy to help. I wish I could do more to help get the word out within
the limits of my public service role -- and I'm also happy to help when anyone asks a
question.
-d.
On Sat, May 13, 2017 at 4:28 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
The logs have massive amounts of personal IP addresses associated with the comments
filed that the public did not give consent to share publicly and even if we do our best to
scrub there still might be something there that someone did not agree to have shared.
One, the site did not go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two, there has
always been an alternative easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-
comments to file comments from should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high
traffic. Three, we have noticed some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the
individual mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above,
potentially making it difficult for individuals to file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-
denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-1494533379
If you release these logs, and if no evidence is found of any form of dishonesty or
trickery, all of this trouble could vanish. On the other hand, if you continue to be
dishonest to the public in this way, distrust will grow. People will assume negative things
about the FCC, and even about your personal business practices. This is in no way a
threat, but just an idle observation of how the human mind works. We, as a species, crave
information. When we don't have that information, many will tend to fill in the blank with
something that may not be exactly true.
If people know the truth, all of these assumptions could stop. If you're innocent, all of
this can blow over. If you're guilty of some sort of trickery on the public, I think we all
know you wouldn't want people to know that, so what you do right now answers our
question for us. If you refuse, everyone will know that there is, in fact, something that the
FCC has done that is not for the good of the people, and that all of you have been
incredibly 'shady' these past few weeks in your practices.
From: David Bray
To: Jessi Johnson
Subject: Re: FCC Integrity Concerns
Date: Sunday, May 14, 2017 10:21:00 PM
Hi Jessi,
No worries and always happy to help. I wish I could do more to help get the word out within
the limits of my public service role -- and I'm also happy to help when anyone asks a question.
-d.
Thanks for your time. My apologies for coming off a bit rough, but the situation seemed a bit
different with the somewhat limited knowledge I had at the time. This cleared up a lot of
misconceptions that I had about the situation. Again, my apologies for being so rude when all I
had to do was conduct a bit more research beforehand.
On Sat, May 13, 2017 at 4:28 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
The logs have massive amounts of personal IP addresses associated with the comments filed
that the public did not give consent to share publicly and even if we do our best to scrub
there still might be something there that someone did not agree to have shared.
One, the site did not go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two, there has
always been an alternative easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-
comments to file comments from should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high
traffic. Three, we have noticed some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual
mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially
making it difficult for individuals to file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-
service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-1494533379
I believe that, logically speaking, it would be in the best interest of everyone for you
to release the logs of a recent Ddos event to a security researcher. I say this because there are
allegations being made that you are hiding important details from the public in an attempt to
make the FCC be looked at as a victim, or that someone executed this Ddos attack in an
attempt to silence the voices of those who sent messages in favor of net neutrality.
If you release these logs, and if no evidence is found of any form of dishonesty or trickery,
all of this trouble could vanish. On the other hand, if you continue to be dishonest to the
public in this way, distrust will grow. People will assume negative things about the FCC,
and even about your personal business practices. This is in no way a threat, but just an idle
observation of how the human mind works. We, as a species, crave information. When we
don't have that information, many will tend to fill in the blank with something that may not
be exactly true.
If people know the truth, all of these assumptions could stop. If you're innocent, all of this
can blow over. If you're guilty of some sort of trickery on the public, I think we all know
you wouldn't want people to know that, so what you do right now answers our question for
us. If you refuse, everyone will know that there is, in fact, something that the FCC has done
that is not for the good of the people, and that all of you have been incredibly 'shady' these
past few weeks in your practices.
From: Dave Sibley
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Internet neutrality
Date: Sunday, May 14, 2017 5:46:11 PM
It sickens me how much your opinion changed between 2014 and this year. It's obvious you
have no interest currently with how the country and it's citizens feel regarding this issue. No
one could logically arrive at your current position on net neutrality from where you were
unless outside forces influenced you.
You went from wanting "a series of hearings" on net neutrality to having no hearings this year.
You recommended "the commission seek guidance from Congress instead of plowing ahead"
to seeking no outside guidance. You went from requesting to "ask ten distinguished
economists from across the country" to asking no one. I could keep quoting you from 2014 but
I assume you remember your own words well enough. You are probably just actively choosing
to ignore yourself. You've made it clear you are actively ignoring a growing population of
people who support net neutrality. You're actively pretending the US hasn't told you directly
that the FCC should support net neutrality by saying the FCC website was under DDoS attack
when evidence points to the majority of the anti-net neutrality arguments are spam.
http://jeffreyfossett.com/2017/05/13/fcc-filings.html
Your ignorant position will damage the internet as we currently understand. It will limit
competition. It will only benefit the currently in place wealthy elite instead of actually being
an open internet.
Drat; I’m sorry that it isn’t working for May 17. (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 8:36 PM
To: Lerner, Jennifer <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: May 17
Humbled and many thanks Jenn.
Today we received massive DDoS attacks as a result of the Jon Oliver video last night --
fortunately we were in the cloud.
Alas 17 May in the morning is when I am speaking at American U. followed by chairing a
GSA meeting followed by a discussion at FTC all before 1pm -- is the morning of 18 May
possible to meet for breakfast around 0930?
Best regards,
-d.
(b) (6) Maybe I can re-schedule my
breakfast meeting. Would coming to the (b) (6) area for breakfast be difficult for you?
Jenn
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, May 07, 2017 8:58 PM
To: Lerner, Jennifer <[email protected]>
Cc: Agliati, Pia <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: May 17
Hi Jenn,
Doing well here. FCC recently had some good news
http://www.nextgov.com/cloud-computing/2017/05/fcc-captures-second-cio-100-
award/137469/
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
The logs have massive amounts of personal IP addresses associated with the comments filed
that the public did not give consent to share publicly and even if we do our best to scrub there
still might be something there that someone did not agree to have shared.
One, the site did not go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two, there has
always been an alternative easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-
comments to file comments from should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high
traffic. Three, we have noticed some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual
mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially
making it difficult for individuals to file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-
are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-1494533379
If you release these logs, and if no evidence is found of any form of dishonesty or trickery,
all of this trouble could vanish. On the other hand, if you continue to be dishonest to the public
in this way, distrust will grow. People will assume negative things about the FCC, and even
about your personal business practices. This is in no way a threat, but just an idle observation
of how the human mind works. We, as a species, crave information. When we don't have that
information, many will tend to fill in the blank with something that may not be exactly true.
If people know the truth, all of these assumptions could stop. If you're innocent, all of this
can blow over. If you're guilty of some sort of trickery on the public, I think we all know you
wouldn't want people to know that, so what you do right now answers our question for us. If
you refuse, everyone will know that there is, in fact, something that the FCC has done that is
not for the good of the people, and that all of you have been incredibly 'shady' these past few
weeks in your practices.
From: Andrew McWhinney
To: Ajit Pai; Mignon Clyburn; Mike ORielly
Subject: FCC Proposal 17-108 "reflection period"
Date: Saturday, May 13, 2017 10:54:45 AM
Good morning,
To begin, I am neither a robot, a "fake" commenter, nor a supposed DDoS attack. In addition,
I do not feel inhibited by arcane procedural rules defining when I may comment on the
function of democracy.
Proposal 17-108 to move regulation of ISPs from Title II back to Title I would cause
tremendous harm to US consumers. ISPs have stated, including Mr. Pai's former employee
Verzion, that Title II regulation has had no effect on infrastructure development or company
operations. Deregulation of ISPs under Title I would allow ISPs to prioritize their own
products and therefore destroy the competitive, egalitarian nature of our society.
Thank you for your time. I hope that you listen to the citizens of our democracy rather than the
corporate interested that have poisoned our government.
Sincerely,
Andrew McWhinney
From: Nathan Korth
To: Ajit Pai; Mignon Clyburn; Mike ORielly
Subject: In support of net neutrality
Date: Saturday, May 13, 2017 10:39:41 AM
Maybe you can't see it through your greed and corruption, but Net Neutrality is what the
American public wants. It's not some kind of "onerous regulation on industry" - it's simply
about protecting everyone's freedom to communicate in the modern world.
Additionally, the recent failure of the FCC to receive public comments is completely
unacceptable, and I will be contacting my representatives to make sure it is thoroughly
investigated. When viewed alongside the flood of automated anti-NN comments, the
shutdown of the comment system (along with the unsubstantiated claims of DDoS) looks a lot
like censorship.
Nathan Korth
Ann Arbor, Michigan
From: Mark Wigfield
To: David Bray
Subject: RE: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:56:19 PM
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:54 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Background chat on FCC website issues?
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:45 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Background chat on FCC website issues?
(b) (5)
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network.
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:02 PM
To: Matthew Berry; David Bray
Subject: FW: Background chat on FCC website issues?
(b) (5)
From: Frank Konkel [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:23 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: Background chat on FCC website issues?
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to release
activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks, and we've been
reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and perhaps some details can
shed light on what really happened here and how you might try to mitigate similar issues in
the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: Mark Wigfield
To: Frank Konkel; David Bray
Subject: RE: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 2:02:23 PM
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to release
activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks, and we've been
reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and perhaps some details can
shed light on what really happened here and how you might try to mitigate similar issues in
the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank_Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
From: Frank Konkel
To: Mark Wigfield; David Bray
Subject: Background chat on FCC website issues?
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 1:23:14 PM
We've been getting a series of statements from organizations calling for FCC to release
activity logs and other such information to prove the validity of said attacks, and we've been
reluctant to run any of those. I'd rather see what the real story is, and perhaps some details can
shed light on what really happened here and how you might try to mitigate similar issues in
the future.
Schedule-wise, Monday morning would be ideal (with the exception of 11-1130 am).
--
Frank Konkel
Senior Editor, Technology & Events
Government Executive Media Group
A Division of Atlantic Media
Office: 202-266-7528
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter | @Frank Konkel
GovExec.com | Nextgov.com | www.DefenseOne.com
Obviously, it’s down again because I get no hits searching yesterday’s and
today’s dates. So we are going to write about that fact. Can you tell me if it’s
due to the DDoS attack or the number of net neutrality comments?
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: Erik Scheibert
To: Uttam Kumar
Cc: Christine Calvosa
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:41:00 AM
(b) (5)
________________________________________
From: Uttam Kumar
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:18:46 AM
To: David Bray; Erik Scheibert; Christine Calvosa; Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
Uttam Kumar
Associate CIO, Tailored Platforms and Data
OMD/Information Technology
Federal Communications Commission
Office: (202) 418-2264
uttam [email protected]
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:16 AM
To: Erik Scheibert <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Uttam Kumar
<[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
________________________________________
From: Erik Scheibert
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:11:30 AM
To: Christine Calvosa; Uttam Kumar; David Bray; Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
________________________________________
From: Christine Calvosa
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:46:54 AM
To: Mark Wigfield; David Bray
Cc: Matthew Berry; Erik Scheibert; Uttam Kumar; Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
Thank you,
Christine
-------- Original Message --------
From: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, May 12, 2017, 10:43
To: David Bray <[email protected]>,Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
CC: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Kirby, Paul [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:34 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace
<[email protected]>
Cc: Stanton, Lynn <[email protected]>
Subject: ECFS
Obviously, it’s down again because I get no hits searching yesterday’s and today’s dates. So we are going to write
about that fact. Can you tell me if it’s due to the DDoS attack or the number of net neutrality
comments?
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-
3A__www.trdailyonline.com_&d=DwMFAg&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=2fIJDJ4pqy-
6Q6sHxEdvdscsL7D4biT86syzgydYRrc&m=-W-
ScwizADmVeotIzD1gEx5_3QnynJw4nVntB6MMQls&s=rhFycGDnqzdwkdsS-
QAEt2qQqqQ_rGmcXjD3omA2GEc&e=>
paul [email protected]
From: David Bray
To: Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:36:49 AM
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:09 AM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:07:02 AM
To: Brian Hart; Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa
Cc: Matthew Berry
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Brian Hart
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:00 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:53 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:46 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield
Subject: Re: Request for comment/interview
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:17:38 AM
(b) (5)
Hi Mark,
It's been a few days since we last reached out to OMR, and I wanted to see if the dust has
settled some and I could get the FCC's side on the DDoS/comment filing incident over the
weekend.
I've worked with David Bray, CC'd before, and I'd love the chance to chat with him on the
phone on the record, or if that's not possible, as not for direct attribution. We'd really like to
get something solid from the FCC on it.
Best,
Billy Mitchell
Managing Editor, FedScoop
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
P: 757.880.7439
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:46 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: Matthew Berry
To: Mark Wigfield; David Bray; Christine Calvosa; Brian Hart
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 11:01:56 AM
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:53 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:46 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Christine Calvosa <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Kirby, Paul [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:34 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace
<[email protected]>
Cc: Stanton, Lynn <[email protected]>
Subject: ECFS
Obviously, it’s down again because I get no hits searching yesterday’s and
today’s dates. So we are going to write about that fact. Can you tell me if it’s
due to the DDoS attack or the number of net neutrality comments?
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield; Christine Calvosa; ITleadership; Erik Scheibert; Uttam Kumar
Cc: Matthew Berry
Subject: Re: FYI TR Daily says ECFS is down
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:51:58 AM
Attachments: pastedImage.png
pastedImage.png
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Kirby, Paul [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:34 AM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace
<[email protected]>
Cc: Stanton, Lynn <[email protected]>
Subject: ECFS
Obviously, it’s down again because I get no hits searching yesterday’s and
today’s dates. So we are going to write about that fact. Can you tell me if it’s
due to the DDoS attack or the number of net neutrality comments?
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: Matthew Domurat
To: David Bray
Subject: Clear Transparency on alleged DDOS attack
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2017 1:54:15 PM
David,
The FCC must provide evidence that the downtime of the website was indeed a DDOS attack,
and not traffic from people outraged by the proposed changes to how the internet is operated
and governed.
Sincerely,
Matt
From: [email protected]
To: Aidan Doherty
Subject: Re: Request for evidence
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2017 1:32:35 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Please release your server logs to an independent security researcher, so the public can
determine whether the FCCs claim of being hit with a recent DDoS attack is true.
Thanks!
A US taxpayer
From: David Bray
To: Ron Cully
Subject: Re: Release the logs David
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2017 11:33:22 AM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
David,
I urge you to make records pertaining to the alleged DDoS attack during a period of high
volume commenting by net neutrality supporters available to independent security annalists.
It is the only way trust can be restored in the relationship between the FCC and the public it is
supposed to be serving,
Yours cordially,
Ehren Bollenbacher
Of San Diego
From: David Bray
To: Scott Gillies
Cc: ECFSHelp
Subject: Re: Net Neutrality Proceedings 17-108 / Release Logs
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 11:33:08 PM
Thank you for your note Scott and it would be best if you file your comment either
using www.fcc.gov/ECFS which should be available or there has always been an alternative
easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file comments from
should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. We have noticed some bulk
filers of lots of comments are using the individual mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in
bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially making it difficult for individuals to file.
I had tried to submit this via the form on your website, but every time I click "Submit" it does
nothing (in two different web browsers). Not sure if it is because your website is still having
issues (and while I'm at it, please release the logs to the public so we can verify your claims
that your site went down because of a DDoS attack...), but here are my thoughts on the matter:
The internet is a great equalizer. It allows people without tons of money and/or political
backing to spread their ideas cheaply and effectively and translate them into action. We
absolutely, 100%, no question NEED to keep it this way. Corporations already control too
much in our country and our world. The internet seems like the last frontier where the little
guy has a chance to succeed and I would be very saddened to see this change.
To quote an email I received today from Win Without War, "Net neutrality allows all of us to
speak truth to power. It allows us to throw light on injustice, and to coordinate, organize, and
support each other’s struggles. Net neutrality helps preserve equal access to the most
important currency in our democracy, ideas."
It seems to be getting harder and harder to speak truth to power without getting drowned out.
Please do not take away one of our best tools to do so. Please preserve Net Neutrality and Title
II.
Thank you,
Scott Gillies
US Citizen
From: David Bray
To: Paul Ross
Subject: Re: Re DDOS Attack Logs
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 9:28:03 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Hi David
Why won’t you release the logs proving there was a DDOS attack? What are FCC trying to hide, or
prevent?
You have a duty to the people of the USA to provide transparency and honesty.
Regards
Paul
From: David Bray
To: Buck Field
Subject: Re: DDoS Attack
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 9:27:16 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
--
Best regards,
Anita I Kishore, PhD
From: Erin McAuliff
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield
Subject: Re: Net neutrality and alleged DDoS attack
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 5:01:22 PM
Thank you for your quick response. Based on the FCC phonebook directory, I have copied
Mark Wigfield from the Media Relations office. If he is not the correct contact, I would
appreciate your assistance in forwarding my note to the appropriate party.
On Wed, May 10, 2017 at 1:52 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
In light of this allegation, the FCC should release its logs to an independent security
researcher who can verify this story and inform the public about what really
happened.
Erin McAuliff
From: [email protected]
To: Erin McAuliff
Subject: Re: Net neutrality and alleged DDoS attack
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 4:52:28 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
As a public agency, the FCC has a responsibility to maintain a functioning website to receive
feedback from the public about important issues that impact all of us -- especially net
neutrality. The FCC's allegations of a DDoS attack on the website are alarming. If true, the
attack likely prevented many people from expressing their support of Title II net neutrality
protections.
In light of this allegation, the FCC should release its logs to an independent security
researcher who can verify this story and inform the public about what really happened.
Erin McAuliff
From: David Bray
To: Ian James
Subject: Re: please release your logs for confirmation of claims
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 4:52:08 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Dear David,
I find it important that the FCC provide evidence of its claims, that a DDoS attack is the
cause of the system crash on Sunday night. It seems that the evidence provided to the public
thus far, leads us to believe these claims are not true. If they are true, please help in the
discussion of finding that out. please play a role of responsibility, empowered by the people,
acting for the people. It’s the right thing to do, and it’s what was implied when you were
given the responsibility of wielding, our power. i promise, you will have much company in
your service of the people, if you stand with the people.
regards,
Ian James
From: David Bray
To: Lilia Manguy
Subject: Re: Please Release the FCC"s DDoS Attack Logs
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 4:44:29 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
On May 10, 2017, at 15:50, Lilia Manguy (b) (6) > wrote:
The public has the right to see proof of the FCC's claims of DDoS attacks on the FCC website
when people were trying to leave comments in support of Title II net neutrality protections.
The FCC has the responsibility of being transparent and accountable to the public.
What are you hiding? Seeing as the current FCC chairman is a former top lawyer for Verizon,
your transparency will go a long way towards reassuring the public that there is no foul play.
I demand that you please release your logs to an independent security researcher or major
media outlet who can verify the DDoS attacks.
Thank you.
Lilia Manguy
Richmond, CA 94804
From: [email protected]
To: pamela worth
Subject: Re: concerned citizen asking for info about your logs
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 4:44:07 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Mr. Bray--I think the public, myself included, has a right to know about what really happened
with your alleged DDOS attacks this week, just as many thousands of people were gearing up
to comment publicly about net neutrality on the FCC's website. Please make your logs public.
(And for the love of the internet, please do what you can to preserve net neutrality!)
Sincerely,
Pamela Worth
A taxpayer in Somerville, MA
From: David Bray
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Net neutrality
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 4:43:41 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Dear Sir,
I am asking you to please release the logs of your so called DDoS attack that resulted in a
inability for net neutrality supporters to voice their concerns following a segment on the John
Oliver show. A independent security advisor could determine the cause behind it and allow
you to fairly determine the American people's view on a open, unrestrained internet as
opposed to a service providers view of a 'milk it for all we can' internet. Please do the right
thing for current and future users of the world wide web.
Thank you
Frank Bliek
This is not a robo-email or part of a DDOS, it is a real communication from a concerned citizen.
My name is David.
I am concerned that the FCC is not playing fair.
There has been so much response to the questions that FCC is setting to dismantle net neutrality to favor big
corporations and raise costs and deny services to internet users, that it appears that this response overwhelmed FCC
servers.
But it has been called a DDOS attack.
Please provide evidence of such.
And please do not follow through with the dismantling of net neutrality.
Signed,
David Modersbach
Oakland CA
From: Whiting, Michael
To: Mark Stone
Subject: RE: eRulemaking
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 1:43:20 PM
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
91 million packets per second, 300 GBPS, multi-vectored (TCP & UDP)
DDoS protection really comes down to 2 things - countermeasures and operational expertise
David Nicholson
Verisign Inc
Security Services
P: 703-948-4263
C: (b) (6)
www verisign com
-----Original Message-----
From: David Bray [mailto:David Bray@fcc gov]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 8:20 PM
To: Nicholson, David
Cc: Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: David Bray Referred Me to You - Verisign DDoS
Many thanks and our Team is scanning for side attacks Of the record, our rate is about 3,000,000 requests/hour Tony can discuss with you further
Best regards,
-d
The trend we are seeing is that approximately half of the time they are launching DDoS attacks it’s a diversionary technique for a breach (this dates back to Stuxnet,
Sony, etc )
I recommend you push your outbound DNS queries through our Recursive DNS firewall to prevent data exfiltration (overview attached)
We did this for a manufacturing company that was being targeted by a hactivist group protesting the Dakota Pipeline (OpNoDAPL) We blocked over 1100 requests in
3 days
Thoughts???
David Nicholson
Verisign Inc
Security Services
P: 703-948-4263
C: (b) (6)
www verisign com<https://urldefense proofpoint com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www verisign com_&d=DwMFAg&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=4wa-
nffQIhGGaGbd-
1xg_wxrLvEK0xBszrTCkKXXWTI&m=3MOJtyXX65NXIOYJnXtNVq2MFuJ0trPhYkEvI2BdTOs&s=hN3nHDppCXyylWtIG6YBipglbZMdh5xBjaFAeKt8CIo&e=>
Tony,
Verisign has protected two root servers (A&J) and 20 TLDs from Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks for the past 19 years with 100% documented uptime
Thanks,
David
David Nicholson
Verisign Inc
Security Services
P: 703-948-4263
C: (b) (6)
www verisign com<https://urldefense proofpoint com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www verisign com_&d=DwMFAg&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=4wa-
nffQIhGGaGbd-
1xg_wxrLvEK0xBszrTCkKXXWTI&m=3MOJtyXX65NXIOYJnXtNVq2MFuJ0trPhYkEvI2BdTOs&s=hN3nHDppCXyylWtIG6YBipglbZMdh5xBjaFAeKt8CIo&e=>
I call for the FCC to release its logs to independent security analysts
so that we know what actually happened. The public has a right to know
re: FCC DDoS attack.
jp
From: David Bray
To: Kathi Mostefai
Subject: Re: Net Neutrality Comments
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 9:39:42 AM
Thank you for your note and it probably would be best to contact the FCC Office of Media
Relations.
Kathi R. Mostefai
Retired IT Engineer and Manager
From: Tony Summerlin (CTR)
To: Hall, John; David Bray
Cc: DeBoissiere, Andrew; Hayman, Denise
Subject: RE: DDoS Mitigation / Neustar
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 8:29:46 AM
John,
I would be more than happy to engage and understand what Neustar provides which could be of
benefit to the FCC. I could make some time available at 2:30pm tomorrow.
Regards,
Tony
From: Hall, John [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 10:59 AM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Tony Summerlin (CTR) <[email protected]>
Cc: DeBoissiere, Andrew <[email protected]>; Hayman, Denise
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: DDoS Mitigation / Neustar
John W Hall
Neustar, Inc. / Sr. Director – Federal Business
[ T ] (571) 246-2407 [ E ] [email protected]
_____________________________________________________________________________________
The information contained in this e-mail message is intended only for the use of the recipient(s) named above and may contain
confidential and/or privileged information If you are not the intended recipient you have received this e-mail message in error
and any review, dissemination, distribution, or copying of this message is strictly prohibited If you have received this
communication in error, please notify us immediately and delete the original message
____________________________________________________________
From: David Bray <[email protected]>
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 at 10:47 AM
To: John Hall <[email protected]>, "Tony Summerlin (CTR)" <[email protected]>
Cc: Andrew DeBoissiere <[email protected]>, "Hayman, Denise"
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: DDoS Mitigation / Neustar
Hi John,
Thank you for your note and FCC Senior Advisor Tony Summerlin would be the best point of
contact to explore what's possible and needed in this area. I've cc'ed him here.
-d.
Mr Bray,
I’m reaching out because I read the Washington Post article regarding your Agencies recent
DDoS attack. Neustar owns and operates the most advanced and resilient DDoS Mitigation
Network in existence. I would welcome / appreciate the opportunity to provide you with a
technical brief, and talk through our competitive differentiation. I’m including a link (below)
that will take you to our “SiteProtect” solution page, but please don’t hesitate to reach out to
arrange a phone or face to face discussion.
https://www.neustar.biz/security/ddos-protection
John W Hall
Neustar, Inc. / Sr. Director – Federal Business
[ T ] (571) 246-2407 [ E ] [email protected]
_____________________________________________________________________________________
The information contained in this e-mail message is intended only for the use of the recipient(s) named above and may contain
confidential and/or privileged information If you are not the intended recipient you have received this e-mail message in error
and any review, dissemination, distribution, or copying of this message is strictly prohibited If you have received this
communication in error, please notify us immediately and delete the original message
____________________________________________________________
From: David Bray
To: Mark Wigfield; Matthew Berry; Brian Hart; Will Wiquist; ITleadership
Subject: Re: More website troubles?
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 2:55:28 PM
(b) (5)
Hi again. I pointed out to Fight for the Future that the timestamps on their screenshots of the
FCC server logs don't back up their claims that the FCC's servers went down after the John
Oliver segment re-aired at 7 pm last night.
They sent me a new screenshot that shows "server unavailable" messages starting at 8:30 pm
last night (The timestamps are in PDT). I've attached it here.
I'll be writing something about their claims for subscribers, so wanted to reach out again:
Did the FCC experience problems with its servers last night?
Was there another DDoS attack?
How can the agency tell the difference between a malicious attack and legitimate traffic from
users trying to get to the website?
Thanks,
Margaret
Hi all -- Fight for the Future claims the FCC's servers went down again after John Oliver's
segment re-aired on HBO.
https://twitter.com/fightfortheftr/status/861962863245742084
Was there another attack? What was the issue? What is the FCC doing to ensure that
legitimate commenters are not deterred by website problems?
Thanks,
Margaret
(b) (5)
Hi again. I pointed out to Fight for the Future that the timestamps on their screenshots of the
FCC server logs don't back up their claims that the FCC's servers went down after the John
Oliver segment re-aired at 7 pm last night.
They sent me a new screenshot that shows "server unavailable" messages starting at 8:30 pm
last night (The timestamps are in PDT). I've attached it here.
I'll be writing something about their claims for subscribers, so wanted to reach out again:
Did the FCC experience problems with its servers last night?
Was there another DDoS attack?
How can the agency tell the difference between a malicious attack and legitimate traffic from
users trying to get to the website?
Please let me know what you can!
Thanks,
Margaret
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Either prove that it was a DDoS attack, and fund whoever did it, or admit that the FCC did it, and have Pai resign.
Hi David –
I hope all is well… I was recently asked to jump in get back to you around your question below.
I spoke with Maryfran who said she was bringing in speakers that haven’t been on the agenda in past year or so –
hence why she hasn’t reached out to you for this year’s program.
However please do let us (on the Council side) of the business know if you will be attending, as it will be nice to
connect with you and discuss ways we can leverage each other support. Our role as an advisory services group is
to drive peer connections that become mutually beneficial in tackling challenges for all CIO’s involved. However I
see a bigger opportunity in leveraging Brand Management Team to promote you as possible speaker and panelists
at some of the national and global events we connect with though partner arrangements.
I saw the article below and realize you have your hands full right now, but let me know if we can meet at the event
in June or setup time for a call to discuss the benefits the CIO Executive Council can offer…
Thanks in advance
Ed V.
PS: as a CIO you did a nice job addressing the public attention to this…
FCC suffers DDoS attacks against public comments website
http://bit.ly/2qYBemI
Edwin Vargas
Director
CIO Executive Council from IDG
O +1.508.766.5420 | C +(b) (6) | CEC
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, April 30, 2017 2:46 PM
To: Steve Ka <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: CIO Perspectives Virginia
Many thanks Steve, I think Maryfran was planning to have me be a speaker at this event? Do you have a
draft agenda?
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
I am requesting that you release the logs suggesting this evidence to independent security
experts. This is an important public matter which is currently preventing citizens from voicing
their support for the title 2 rules supporting an open and free internet.
Thank you,
Chris Boustead
From: David Bray
To: Sinai, Nick; Eaves, David
Subject: Re: David Eaves <> David Bray
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 9:36:42 AM
Great to connect David E. and many thanks for the introduction Nick.
Happy to chat about how other agencies can move off of legacy IT and adopt modern cloud
services with speed; fortunately we did so at the FCC when we had the recent DDoS events
yesterday combined with the increased interest in filing comments for proceeding 17-108
https://fcw.com/blogs/fcw-insider/2017/05/fcc-cloud.aspx
http://www.nextgov.com/cloud-computing/2017/05/fcc-captures-second-cio-100-
award/137469/
-d.
David Eaves is a professor here at HKS and director of the new Digital HKS program
David Bray is the CIO of the FCC, and leader in getting government to move to cloud apps
Nick Sinai
Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy, Harvard Kennedy School
Cell: (b) (6)
DPI 663 website, course listing & syllabus; faculty page
Course Assistants: Angel Quicksey, Chante Lantos-Sweet
Faculty Assistant: Jessica Colarossi
Security at the Pace of Commercial Innovation
Securing the Smart Grid
President Obama’s Last Official Act
Will Trump’s Procurement Reform Work?
Venture Investing in the Public Sector
The Untold Story of VA Leadership
The U.S Digital Service comes to Harvard
From: David Bray
To: DT
Subject: Re: Sunday Night DDOS - Net Neutrality
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 8:46:41 AM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations. Whomever is suggesting
you email this address has the incorrect POC.
Mr. Bray,
As a tax-paying American citizen who works in the telecommunications industry, it's extremely concerning to see
that an attack on your website may have prevented the voice of thousands of concerned citizens voicing their
opinion on Net Neutrality. Your chairman's hostility to an open internet presents an interesting conundrum, which
could be seen as our government working for big telecom and other lobbyists and not the citizens. With this being
said, the logs from the event Sunday night should be released to an independent security auditor, so that the public
may know the truth. Please remember who this government works for, it's not corporations.
Sincerely,
David A Vaughn
From: Kartikeya Iyer
To: David Bray
Subject: About the CIO statement on the FCC being the victims of an alleged DDoS attack
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 12:24:42 AM
The FCC is saying that the site hosting their comment system was attacked at the exact same
time comments would have started flooding in from John Oliver’s viral "Last Week Tonight"
segment about net neutrality. The media widely reported that the surge in comments crashed
the FCC’s site.
- The FCC is being intentionally misleading, and trying to claim that the surge in traffic
from large numbers of people attempting to access their site through John Oliver’s
GoFCCYourself.com redirect amounts to a “DDoS” attack, to let themselves off the hook for
essentially silencing large numbers of people by not having a properly functioning site to
receive comments from the public about an important issue, or—worst case—is preparing a
bogus legal argument that somehow John Oliver’s show itself was the DDoS attack.
- Someone actually did DDoS the FCC’s site at the exact same time as John Oliver’s
segment, in order to actively prevent people from being able to comment in support of keeping
the Title II net neutrality rules many of us fought for in 2015.
Given the current FCC chairman Ajit Pai’s open hostility ( https://www.theguardian.com/
technology/2017/apr/26/trump-overturn-net-neutrality-rules-resistance ) towards real net
neutrality (notwithstanding the blatant sham that is the laughably-titled "Restoring Internet
Freedom"), and the telecom industry’s long history of astroturfing (
https://news.vice.com/article/cable-companies-are-astroturfing-fake-consumer-support-to-end-
net-neutrality ) and paying shady organizations ( https://motherboard.vice.com/
en_us/article/shady-conservative-group-is-flooding-the-fcc-with-anti-net-neutrality-comments
) to influence the FCC, either of these scenarios should be concerning for anyone who cares
about government transparency, free speech, and the future of the Internet.
To validate the claims of being "DDoS"ed, The FCC should release original untampered
server logs to qualified independent & unaffiliated security researchers. Not doing this will
merely lend credence and substantiation to claims that the FCC is being less-than-truthful
about this matter, and in fact is actively preventing members of the public from expressing
and/or formally registering their views on the very important matter of a free and open
Internet.
Thank you,
Kartikeya IYER
From: [email protected]
To: Lerner, Jennifer
Subject: Re: May 17
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 10:31:35 PM
Oh dear. Any availability the day before (16 May?). Sorry the calendar is so full as I definitely
would like to catch-up with you soon.
Drat; I’m sorry that it isn’t working for May 17. (b) (6)
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 8:36 PM
To: Lerner, Jennifer <Jennifer [email protected]>
Subject: Re: May 17
Humbled and many thanks Jenn.
Today we received massive DDoS attacks as a result of the Jon Oliver video last night --
fortunately we were in the cloud.
Alas 17 May in the morning is when I am speaking at American U. followed by chairing a
GSA meeting followed by a discussion at FTC all before 1pm -- is the morning of 18 May
possible to meet for breakfast around 0930?
Best regards,
-d.
(b) (6) Maybe I can re-schedule my
breakfast meeting. Would coming to the (b) (6) area for breakfast be difficult for you?
Jenn
From: David Bray [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, May 07, 2017 8:58 PM
To: Lerner, Jennifer <[email protected]>
Cc: Agliati, Pia <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: May 17
Hi Jenn,
Doing well here. FCC recently had some good news
http://www.nextgov.com/cloud-computing/2017/05/fcc-captures-second-cio-100-
award/137469/
... and I also found out I've been accepted as a 2017-2018 German Marshall Memorial Fellow
which involves 24 days of travel to 5 different cities in Europe in March 2018 to focus on
Trans-Atlantic issues of shared concern.
I'd love to meet-up however I'm speaking at American University that day re: the Senior
Executive Service. Any chance you might be able to have dinner that evening downtown
around 6pm or 6:30pm?
I'll keep the evening of 17 May reserved for you in the event that it also works for your
schedule -- my apologies that lunch is already booked.
With highest regards,
-d.
Thank you for your note and it probably is best to inquire with our Office of Media Relations.
I am a professional developer and am curious to see system logs of traffic during John Oliver's show. I believe your
system wasn't ddos'd and want to investigate to prove if it really was, or if it wasn't. These logs shouldn't be of any
security concern, and any sensitive data can be randomized (such as ips or other info).
From: [email protected]
To: Lerner, Jennifer
Subject: Re: May 17
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 8:35:48 PM
Today we received massive DDoS attacks as a result of the Jon Oliver video last night --
fortunately we were in the cloud.
Best regards,
-d.
Jenn
Hi Jenn,
... and I also found out I've been accepted as a 2017-2018 German Marshall Memorial Fellow
which involves 24 days of travel to 5 different cities in Europe in March 2018 to focus on
Trans-Atlantic issues of shared concern.
I'd love to meet-up however I'm speaking at American University that day re: the Senior
Executive Service. Any chance you might be able to have dinner that evening downtown
around 6pm or 6:30pm?
I'll keep the evening of 17 May reserved for you in the event that it also works for your
schedule -- my apologies that lunch is already booked.
-d.
David,
By any chance are you free for lunch on May 17th? I’d be happy to take you to lunch in DC.
Best,
Jenn
Jennifer S. Lerner
Professor, Harvard University
Faculty Chair, Leadership Decision Making Program
Bio: https://www.hks.harvard.edu/about/faculty-staff-directory/jennifer-lerner
Google Scholar page: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=ZDfRizQAAAAJ&hl=en
From: [email protected]
To: Nicholson David
Cc: Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Subject: Re: David Bray Referred Me to You - Verisign DDoS
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 8:19:33 PM
Many thanks and our Team is scanning for side attacks Of the record, our rate is about 3,000,000 requests/hour Tony can discuss with you further
Best regards,
-d
The trend we are seeing is that approximately half of the time they are launching DDoS attacks it’s a diversionary technique for a breach (this dates back to Stuxnet,
Sony, etc )
I recommend you push your outbound DNS queries through our Recursive DNS firewall to prevent data exfiltration (overview attached)
We did this for a manufacturing company that was being targeted by a hactivist group protesting the Dakota Pipeline (OpNoDAPL) We blocked over 1100 requests in
3 days
Thoughts???
David Nicholson
Verisign Inc
Security Services
P: 703-948-4263
C: (b) (6)
www verisign com<https://urldefense proofpoint com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www verisign com_&d=DwMFAg&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=4wa-
nffQIhGGaGbd-
1xg_wxrLvEK0xBszrTCkKXXWTI&m=3MOJtyXX65NXIOYJnXtNVq2MFuJ0trPhYkEvI2BdTOs&s=hN3nHDppCXyylWtIG6YBipglbZMdh5xBjaFAeKt8CIo&e=>
Tony,
Verisign has protected two root servers (A&J) and 20 TLDs from Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks for the past 19 years with 100% documented uptime
Thanks,
David
David Nicholson
Verisign Inc
Security Services
P: 703-948-4263
C: (b) (6)
www verisign com<https://urldefense proofpoint com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www verisign com_&d=DwMFAg&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=4wa-
nffQIhGGaGbd-
1xg_wxrLvEK0xBszrTCkKXXWTI&m=3MOJtyXX65NXIOYJnXtNVq2MFuJ0trPhYkEvI2BdTOs&s=hN3nHDppCXyylWtIG6YBipglbZMdh5xBjaFAeKt8CIo&e=>
The trend we are seeing is that approximately half of the time they are launching DDoS attacks it’s a
diversionary technique for a breach (this dates back to Stuxnet, Sony, etc.)
I recommend you push your outbound DNS queries through our Recursive DNS firewall to prevent data
exfiltration (overview attached).
We did this for a manufacturing company that was being targeted by a hactivist group protesting the
Dakota Pipeline (OpNoDAPL). We blocked over 1100 requests in 3 days.
Thoughts???
David Nicholson
Verisign Inc.
Security Services
P: 703-948-4263
C: (b) (6)
www.verisign.com
Tony,
Verisign has protected two root servers (A&J) and 20 TLDs from Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks for the
past 19 years with 100% documented uptime.
Thanks,
David
David Nicholson
Verisign Inc.
Security Services
P: 703-948-4263
C: (b) (6)
www.verisign.com
From: David Bray
To: Michael Nelson; John Kaden
Subject: Re: Invitation: David Bray and Cloudflare @ Mon May 8, 2017 9pm - 10pm (David Bray)
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 5:47:50 PM
I am almost there -- inching in the traffic on 395. A drink will be needed ;-)
Fortunately this time FCC is allowing us to say it was a DDoS just like it was in 2014 hidden within the
normal stream of comments.
From: Michael Nelson [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:04 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; John Kaden <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Invitation: David Bray and Cloudflare @ Mon May 8, 2017 9pm - 10pm (David Bray)
Thanks for the update, David. John Oliver can make life interesting.
Mike
On May 8, 2017 4:55 PM, "David Bray" <[email protected]> wrote:
Gentlemen, I am inbound to your location. Probably more like 5:30pm if that’s okay. It’s been a
full day at the FCC as you might have gathered.
See you soon.
-----Original Appointment-----
From: Michael Nelson [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 05, 2017 8:32 AM
To: Michael Nelson; [email protected]; David Bray
Subject: Invitation: David Bray and Cloudflare @ Mon May 8, 2017 9pm - 10pm (David Bray)
When: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:00 PM-6:00 PM (UTC-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada).
Where: Lyon Hall, 3100 Washington Blvd, Arlington, VA 22201, USA
more details »
David Bray and Cloudflare
When Mon May 8, 2017 9pm – 10pm GMT (no daylight saving)
Where Lyon Hall, 3100 Washington Blvd, Arlington, VA 22201, USA (map)
Video call https://plus.google.com/hangouts/ /cloudflare.com/david-bray-and
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:25 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Cc: ITleadership <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: Release your 5-7/5-8 logs for independent review.
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:22 PM
To: 'Sidney Hale (b) (6)
Subject: RE: Release your 5-7/5-8 logs for independent review.
Thank you for note and please contact our Office of Media Relations.
From: Sidney Hale [mailto(b) (6)
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:20 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>
Subject: Release your 5-7/5-8 logs for independent review.
You have claimed that there was a DDoS attack at the exact same time people found out there
was an actual link for leaving comments on this BS regulation. We don't believe you. Your
website was not prepared for the amount of comments it was receiving, and that's how the
public will see this regardless of your alternative facts. UNLESS YOU RELEASE THE LOGS
FOR INDEPENDENT REVIEW, then you are a liar.
--
Regards,
Sidney I. Hale II
Founding Partner of Isom Ventures LLC
To: Matthew Berry; Mark Wigfield; Brian Hart
Subject: RE: More on DDoS
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 5:07:01 PM
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:04 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; David Bray
<[email protected]>
Subject: FW: More on DDoS
(b) (5)
From: Margaret McGill [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 5:02 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>
Subject: More on DDoS
Hey all,
I remember during the background press call on the net neutrality NPRM, someone
mentioned that the FCC has been hit with malicious attacks before.
Was there a similar DDoS attack during the last net neutrality debate? Did it also occur after
the Jon Oliver episode in 2014?
I was looking at this chart of comment volume during the last debate, and it doesn't look like
there was a huge surge following the Oliver segment in June 2014 that would have been
enough comments to overwhelm the system.
Please let me know what you can today! I'm doing a short story.
Thanks,
Margaret
Margaret Harding McGill
Politico Pro Tech
703-842-1799 (w)
(b) (6) (c)
[email protected]
From: Tony Summerlin (CTR)
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: David Bray Referred Me to You - Verisign DDoS
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 4:42:38 PM
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Tony,
Verisign has protected two root servers (A&J) and 20 TLDs from Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks for the
past 19 years with 100% documented uptime.
Thanks,
David
David Nicholson
Verisign Inc.
Security Services
P: 703-948-4263
C: (b) (6)
www.verisign.com
From: David Bray
To: Tony Summerlin ([email protected])
Subject: FW: David Bray Referred Me to You - Verisign DDoS
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 4:38:00 PM
Attachments: Verisign DDoS Monitoring & Mitigation Solution.pdf
(b) (5)
Tony,
Verisign has protected two root servers (A&J) and 20 TLDs from Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks for the
past 19 years with 100% documented uptime.
Thanks,
David
David Nicholson
Verisign Inc.
Security Services
P: 703-948-4263
C: (b) (6)
www.verisign.com
From: David Bray
To: Carla Rudder
Cc: ghamilton
Subject: RE: Your Q&A on the CCOE is live!
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 4:30:00 PM
Terrific Carla and many thanks. It’s a good timing as today we’re being hit by DDoS attacks
associated with the 17-108 (“Net neutrality”) proceeding that we’re only able to keep up with
because we’re cloud-based.
https://www.fcc.gov/document/statement-fcc-cio-denial-service-attack-fcc-comment-system
Hi David,
We can certainly adjust the headline! How about the below? We like your suggestion but
tweaked it a bit to keep it concise.
FCC CIO: How the federal government can adopt cloud with speed
Thanks,
Carla
Many thanks Carla, truly appreciated. One question – would it be possible to update the title as
it’s not necessarily “my” center of excellence, it’s one for the entire U.S. government. Could we
use:
“Lessons from the FCC CIO: How all of Public Service Can Adopt Cloud With Speed”
Hi David,
Just wanted to make sure you saw that your Q&A on the cloud center of excellence is live
on our site this morning. Below is a link. We also shared via our LinkedIn page and tagged
you there: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-enterprisers-project
Inside FCC CIO's new cloud center of excellence
https://enterprisersproject.com/article/2017/5/inside-fcc-cios-new-cloud-center-excellence
--
Carla Rudder
Content Manager
The Enterprisers Project
https://enterprisersproject.com/
--
Carla Rudder
Content Manager
The Enterprisers Project
https://enterprisersproject.com/
From: Chris Bing
To: David Bray
Cc: Mark Wigfield; Will Wiquist; Neil Grace
Subject: Re: [FEDSCOOP] - FCC experiences DDoS?
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 4:29:50 PM
Thanks David.
No problem. Just sent similar questions separately to the general press email.
Hi Chris,
Happy to help – that said, can you route through OMR as they have some answers already
available and then we can go from there? Many thanks.
Hi David,
My colleague Billy Mitchell sent me your contact information. I am curious about this
DDoS story. I have a few questions -- also available by phone:(b) (6)
1.) Was the DDoS limited to only the comment section of the FCC's website? Were other
services affected? Do you have any idea for why this occurred or who did this attack?
2.) How were you able to confirm this incident was in fact a DDoS rather than pure internet
traffic? How do you define a DDoS attack -- can you provide any additional technical details
like the amount of traffic? For long did the disruption last?
--
Christopher Bing
Cybersecurity Reporter
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
Mobile P: (b) (6)
Office P: 609-747-2321
--
Christopher Bing
Cybersecurity Reporter
Scoop News Group
FedScoop//StateScoop//EdScoop//CyberScoop
E: [email protected]
Mobile P: (b) (6)
Office P: 609-747-2321
From: Nicholson, David
To: Tony Summerlin (CTR)
Cc: David Bray
Subject: David Bray Referred Me to You - Verisign DDoS
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 4:02:46 PM
Attachments: Verisign DDoS Monitoring & Mitigation Solution.pdf
Tony,
Verisign has protected two root servers (A&J) and 20 TLDs from Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks for the
past 19 years with 100% documented uptime.
Thanks,
David
David Nicholson
Verisign Inc.
Security Services
P: 703-948-4263
C: (b) (6)
www.verisign.com
From: Mark Wigfield
To: David Bray; Matthew Berry; Brian Hart; Will Wiquist; Neil Grace
Subject: RE: DDoS clarification
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 3:43:34 PM
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Drew FitzGerald [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:29 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: DDoS clarification
Hi Mark,
What type of DDoS attack did you observe last night, and roughly how long did the attack
last? Also, which commercial providers absorbed the attack? Any details would be helpful.
Thanks,
--
Drew FitzGerald | Reporter
The Wall Street Journal.
Office: 212-416-2909
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter: @drewfitzgerald
(b) (5)
From: David Bray
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:38 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: DDoS clarification
(b) (5)
From: Mark Wigfield
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:35 PM
To: David Bray <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>; Will Wiquist <[email protected]>; Neil Grace <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: DDoS clarification
(b) (5)
From: Drew FitzGerald [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2017 3:29 PM
To: Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: DDoS clarification
Hi Mark,
What type of DDoS attack did you observe last night, and roughly how long did the attack
last? Also, which commercial providers absorbed the attack? Any details would be helpful.
Thanks,
--
Drew FitzGerald | Reporter
The Wall Street Journal.
Office: 212-416-2909
Mobile: (b) (6)
Twitter: @drewfitzgerald
Thank you for your note. I am not a Commissioner, I am a non-partisan SES member who
served under Chairman Wheeler and now serves under Chairman Pai. My views on the issue
were never consulted and it is not my place to weigh-in as I have not been hired in that
capacity. My mom-partisan role to provide, given the finite resources available, the ability for
the U.S. public to leave their comments with the FCC.
On what is in my purview:
There have been groups claiming the commenting website crashed. One, the site did not go
down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two, there has always been an alternative
easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file comments from
should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. Three, we have noticed some
bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual mechanism (ECFS) to file comments
in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially making it difficult for individuals to
file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-
battle-1494533379
Groups have also wanted logs regarding the bots and denial of service. On that topic, the logs
have massive amounts of personal IP addresses associated with the comments filed that the
public did not give consent to share publicly and even if we do our best to scrub there still
might be something there that someone did not agree to have shared.
I watched your vote on Net Neutrality legislation today and it is clear to me that the FCC is
nothing but a shill for internet service providers. Your dismissal of the views of the American
people is what troubles me the most. I will do my part to spread the truth about the FCC and
it's role in what will ultimately result in a further increase in broadband pricing. In a time
where corporations have unlimited power over the American people, some of the biggest
corporations in existence were just handed even more. This is your legacy.
Sincerely,
Jacob Ulrich
From: David Bray
To: Robert Boler
Subject: Re: Release FCC site logs to an independent security researcher
Date: Saturday, May 13, 2017 9:09:03 AM
No worries, always happy to help and here to serve. Wishing you a great weekend ahead,
-d.
Robert
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media
Relations. The logs have massive amounts of personal IP addresses associated
with the comments filed that the public did not give consent to share publicly and
even if we do our best to scrub there still might be something there that someone
did not agree to have shared.
One, the site did not go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two,
there has always been an alternative easy to use website
at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file comments from should
you find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. Three, we have noticed
some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual mechanism (ECFS)
to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially making it
difficult for individuals to file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-
service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-1494533379
I am a strong supporter of the FCC, of strong regulation of ISPs under Title 2, and
a level playing field on the internet for all companies.
The ambiguity around the reported attack on the FCC site is calling into question
the legitimacy of the essential public commenting system.
Please release the site logs to an independent security research firm, so they can
clarify what happened to the site and provide recommendations for it to be
reliably functional during this important time.
Thank you,
Robert Boler
Austin, TX 78751
From: [email protected]
To: Robert Boler
Subject: Re: Release FCC site logs to an independent security researcher
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:06:29 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
The logs have massive amounts of personal IP addresses associated with the comments filed
that the public did not give consent to share publicly and even if we do our best to scrub there
still might be something there that someone did not agree to have shared.
One, the site did not go down, it was unavailable for everyone to access. Two, there has
always been an alternative easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-
comments to file comments from should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high
traffic. Three, we have noticed some bulk filers of lots of comments are using the individual
mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially
making it difficult for individuals to file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-
are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-1494533379
I am a strong supporter of the FCC, of strong regulation of ISPs under Title 2, and a level
playing field on the internet for all companies.
The ambiguity around the reported attack on the FCC site is calling into question the
legitimacy of the essential public commenting system.
Please release the site logs to an independent security research firm, so they can clarify what
happened to the site and provide recommendations for it to be reliably functional during this
important time.
Thank you,
Robert Boler
Austin, TX 78751
From: Mark Wigfield
To: David Bray
Subject: RE: can you ask him if this is accurate? thanks.
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 4:49:35 PM
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
The FCC this week delayed posting comments in the electronic comment filing
system (ECFS), while it modifies the posting schedule in the wake of a huge
number of comments in its open Internet proceeding, an FCC official told TR
Daily today.
Coding is being tested both for the “on demand” function as well as to enable
comments filed in the open Internet proceeding in WC docket 17-08 via an
electronic inbox established for the docket (TR Daily, April 27) to be pulled into
ECFS. However, additional manual work on those submissions is necessary
before they can be posted so they would not be posted with the “on demand”
function, the official said.
The decision to delay posting comments filed in ECFS took effect the afternoon
of May 10, said the official, adding that some comments would be posted today
and all of them should be posted by the end of this weekend.
Earlier this week, FCC Chief Information Officer David Bray said that delays
experienced by parties attempting to file comments through ECFS were caused
by multiple distributed denial-of service attacks (DDoS), not by a large number
of parties trying to file comments (TR Daily May 8). That problem is not related
to the ECFS posting changes that are being made, a spokesman said.- Paul
Kirby, [email protected]
Paul Kirby
Senior Editor
TRDaily
(A Unit of Wolters Kluwer
Legal & Regulatory Solutions U.S.)
202-842-8920
1015 15th St. NW, 10th floor
Washington, D.C., 20005
www.trdailyonline.com
[email protected]
From: David Bray
To: Ben Ransford
Subject: Re: Volunteering to analyze denial of service logs
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2017 11:53:58 PM
Many thanks however there is both sensitive and private information included on the logs that
are massive. If you are curious about what is happening, there has always been an alternative
easy to use website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file comments from
should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. We have noticed some bulk
filers of lots of comments are using the individual mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in
bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially making it difficult for individuals to
file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-
battle-1494533379
Dear David,
My team and I would like to volunteer to analyze logs from the denial of service you suffered
on May 7 and thereabouts. We are a team of Ph.D.'s in computer science affiliated with the
University of Washington and would be proud to help FCC with evidentiary claims about this
event.
Dear M. Pai,
Regards,
Yvan Beaulieu
--
Yvan Beaulieu PhD
Président, CryptoSémio Inc.
Analyste (informatique, sécurité et sémiotique)
Analyst (IT, security and semiotics)
PhD (Sémiotique de la cryptologie/Semiotics and cryptology)
Membre de l'AQIII
+++++++++++++
CryptoSémio :
There is more to information security than computer security. (c)
La sécurité de l'information c'est plus que la sécurité de
l'informatique. (c)
+++++++++++++
--
Yvan Beaulieu PhD
Président, CryptoSémio Inc.
Conseiller (sécurité de l'information, gouvernance et sémiotique)
Advisor (information security, governance and semiotics)
PhD (Sémiotique de la cryptologie/Semiotics and cryptology)
Membre de l'AQIII
+++++++++++++
CryptoSémio :
There is more to information security than computer security. (c)
La sécurité de l'information c'est plus que la sécurité de l'informatique. (c)
+++++++++++++
From: [email protected]
To: Kayleen Reynolds
Subject: Re: 17-108 Denial of Service attack
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 11:18:21 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Dear Sir,
I would like to encourage you to release your logs to an independent security expert so it can
be ascertained who or what slowed down your site Sunday May 7th. I personally had to try for
12 hours before my objection to these changes were registered.
Kayleen Reynolds
From: Diane Morrison
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: WSJ article on ECFS
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 8:18:53 AM
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 5:06 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-battle-1494533379
FCC Chairman Ajit Pai has proposed paring back or eliminating many Obama-era net neutrality rules. Photo:
Pau Barrena/Bloomberg News
By
John D. McKinnon
42 COMMENTS
COMMUNICATIONS DAILY
From: Brian Hart
To: Ajit Pai; Matthew Berry; Nicholas Degani
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 3:11:08 PM
(b) (5)
From: Ajit Pai
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 1:19 PM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>; Brian
Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b)
(5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 1:18 PM
To: Ajit Pai <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b) (5)
From: Ajit Pai
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 1:15 PM
To: Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian
Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b) (5)
From: Nicholas Degani
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 11:41 AM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Ajit Pai
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b) (5)
From: Ajit Pai
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 10:05 AM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b) (5)
From: Brian Hart
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 9:58 AM
To: Ajit Pai <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b) (5)
From: Ajit Pai
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 9:26 AM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
From: Anika Reed [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 9:25 AM
To: Ajit Pai <[email protected]>
Subject: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
Good morning Chairman Pai,
My name is Anika Reed, and I’m an editorial assistant with CQ Researcher, a weekly print and online
periodical that covers timely topics in longform reports. I’m working on a shorter report for CQR
about the latest updates and possible future changes in ISP regulations, net neutrality and
telecommunications mergers. I think your voice would be an expert opinion to hear on in this story,
and I am interested in interviewing you. I’m working on deadline for this story, so please get back to
me at your earliest convenience and let me know if you have time for a brief interview this week.
Best regards,
Anika
--
Anika Reed
Editorial Assistant
CQ Researcher and SAGE Business Researcher
SAGE Publishing
2600 Virginia Ave NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20037
USA
T: 202-729-1438
www.sagepublishing.com
www.cqpress.com
Los Angeles | London | New Delhi
Singapore | Washington DC | Melbourne
From: Brian Hart
To: Matthew Berry; Ajit Pai; Nicholas Degani
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 1:19:14 PM
(b) (5)
From: Matthew Berry
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 1:18 PM
To: Ajit Pai <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>; Brian Hart
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b) (5)
From: Ajit Pai
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 1:15 PM
To: Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>; Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian
Hart <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b) (5)
From: Nicholas Degani
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 11:41 AM
To: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Brian Hart <[email protected]>; Ajit Pai
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
From: Brian Hart
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 10:52 AM
To: Ajit Pai <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b) (5)
From: Ajit Pai
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 10:05 AM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b) (5)
From: Brian Hart
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 9:58 AM
To: Ajit Pai <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
(b) (5)
From: Ajit Pai
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 9:26 AM
To: Brian Hart <[email protected]>
Cc: Matthew Berry <[email protected]>; Nicholas Degani <[email protected]>
Subject: FW: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
From: Anika Reed [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 09, 2017 9:25 AM
To: Ajit Pai <[email protected]>
Subject: CQ Researcher internet/technology article
Good morning Chairman Pai,
My name is Anika Reed, and I’m an editorial assistant with CQ Researcher, a weekly print and online
periodical that covers timely topics in longform reports. I’m working on a shorter report for CQR
about the latest updates and possible future changes in ISP regulations, net neutrality and
telecommunications mergers. I think your voice would be an expert opinion to hear on in this story,
and I am interested in interviewing you. I’m working on deadline for this story, so please get back to
me at your earliest convenience and let me know if you have time for a brief interview this week.
Best regards,
Anika
--
Anika Reed
Editorial Assistant
CQ Researcher and SAGE Business Researcher
SAGE Publishing
2600 Virginia Ave NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20037
USA
T: 202-729-1438
www.sagepublishing.com
www.cqpress.com
Los Angeles | London | New Delhi
Singapore | Washington DC | Melbourne
From: David Bray
To: John Ackerly
Cc: (b) (6)
Subject: Re: Discovery call / Customer Advisory Board / Verizon
Date: Sunday, May 14, 2017 11:48:30 PM
(b) (6)
Should you be interested, here's a draft blog post/press release I've prepped for Chairman and
his office should they want to share more details on the interesting events of the last week.
Please keep close hold for now.
Many thanks.
(b) (6)
Hi John,
Happy to help -- the next few weeks have the FCC in a period of intense media
focus, perhaps we could aim for around 3:30 or 4pm to chat re: the Discovery call
phone on Thursday, 01 June? Would that work for you?
(b) (6)
-d.
Would you be willing to spend 15 minutes on the phone with a consulting firm doing a "voice of the
customer" market study for us?
Your guidance on our roadmap has been invaluable -- especially thinking around leveraging attribute based
access control inherent in the TDF, and framing our differentiators around "last mile" data control, and data
classification.
(b) (6)
Anyway, thanks very much for all your support over the past few years!
John
(b) (6)
(b) (5)
(b) (5)
Ajit Pai,
I was not able to post to the FCC website because the URL is broken or
not work or offline so please find my individual comment on net
neutrality below.
Please fix the webpage and then notify me so I can go through all that
inconvenient stuff designed to keep citizens comments to a minimum and
make a comment in support of maintaining strong net neutrality. It
would be polite to also apologize to everyone for inconveniencing
them. And how about making it simpler?
So, basically I agree with John Oliver on Last Week Tonight tonight.
Sincerely
Bruce Kline
(b) (6)
This email was sent to [email protected] by: POLITICO, LLC 1000 Wilson Blvd.
Arlington, VA, 22209, USA
From: Matt Green
To: Ajit Pai; Mignon Clyburn; Mike ORielly
Subject: Net Neutrality Title II must stay.
Date: Thursday, May 18, 2017 2:41:15 PM
I wrote to you last week letting you know of my strong feelings to keep the current Title II
regulations on ISPs. I'm writing again as I was very disappointed to read you've voted at
currently rolling back these regulations, though it may take some time.
Overwhemingly, the public comments support the current regulations. Despite ISPs using
BOTs to SPAM comments in their favor. (That should be an indication of their intentions.)
Title II keeps the power in the hands of the people and the internet open and free to everyone.
I wish I could understand the logic in blindly trusting the ISPs to do the right thing if the
regulation is removed...I promise you they won't.
Matthew Green
(b) (6)
Hi Chad,
Certainly on ECFS the two best #ChangeAgents to discuss this with would be ACIO for Tailored Platforms Uttam
Kumar and Senior Advisor Byron Caswell, both cc'ed. Share your proposal and see what they think as possible next steps.
Many thanks,
-d:
David,
This is great advice. One of the many reasons I like supporting the FCC, is all of the content you mentioned that I can
soak up regarding technology initiatives.
I have done some homework over the last few weeks concerning the ECFS Application.
I would like to meet with her to discuss how Red Hat can help the FCC Optimize ECFS. I am hearing that ECFS is
deployed in docker containers on Red Hat Servers. Red Hat has a technology related to docker containers that allow the
FCC to
further increase optimization (operations and cost). It also increases security while optimizing the application
environment. Below would be the proposed agenda for the meeting:
Demo:
My advice:
* Read more about what we're doing and our strategy, hear some of our folks speak at different events, get to
understand what you can from the open (and we have a lot in the open) about what we're
doing and our challenges
* Then come with a specific pitch to show a solution that could address those specific challenges via a demo in our
Technology Experience Center. Show, like you would to a VC, what value could be
provided.
* Then we'll make our time -- otherwise we get 60-70 cold call emails + 10-12 voice calls a day, especially right about
now w/ Congress finally approving a budget. What we're looking for is not someone
that wants us to make time to explain what we're doing to them -- rather someone who can research and learn what
we're doing and make a specific pitch based on what's out there from events we've spoken at and shared our challenges.
-d.
________________________________________
David,
I know you contributed to our Government Symposium last year, so it would be great to get you involved sometime
soon with all of the events we have coming up. I have a few things in mind and will get back to
you with some ideas.
In the meantime as long as you're okay with it, I plan to reach out to your
Deputy CIO for Tech Christine Calvosa in hopes of discussing Multi-Cloud and Open Source strategies. Any advice
you could share around engaging with her would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
Chad DiMarzo
Hybrid Cloud Strategist - Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
David,
I might have a great opportunity to share in a public venue, with Red Hat, industry, and with a few of your government
peers.
I should have offered this to you earlier, but here are the details:
Time:
8:00am - 10:00am
What: Discussions around Emerging IT Modernization efforts of the new administration and how the proposed
Management Government Technology (MGT) Act can move us forward.
I look forward to
your response.
Chad DiMarzo
Hybrid Cloud Strategist - Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
-d.
________________________________________
Hi David,
I wanted to follow up on the email below and see if either of those times worked for you, I tentatively blocked them off
if they do.
Cheers,
Chad DiMarzo
Hybrid Cloud Strategist - Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
What
is your Docker Container Strategy? <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-
3A__tracking.cirrusinsight.com_88de4273-2D3887-2D4799-2D805f-2Dc4f0d959c49f_urldefense-2Dproofpoint-2Dcom-
2Dv2-2Durl10&d=DwMFaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=TiFajvzHRy70agrmP8N9c-
637_VamityuwkjVdY_OXE&m=6tkhbGAXzJjFsEqMq-jWKRBatJ1FV-cFJjS9rSKkN1E&s=x8Ke7DEXurdMt-
dVeQQxfnJg9ih0Ts_hLGwYn7l5fl0&e=>
Containers
are Linux- Must Read <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__tracking.cirrusinsight.com_88de4273-
2D3887-2D4799-2D805f-2Dc4f0d959c49f_urldefense-2Dproofpoint-2Dcom-2Dv2-
2Durl11&d=DwMFaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=TiFajvzHRy70agrmP8N9c-
637_VamityuwkjVdY_OXE&m=6tkhbGAXzJjFsEqMq-jWKRBatJ1FV-
cFJjS9rSKkN1E&s=_q4e86w3qDthQ6IsImqfJhufn5dZJinfxbBc6G6ZQcg&e=>
On Wed, Apr 26, 2017 at 8:42 AM, Chad DiMarzo <[email protected]> wrote:
I wanted to see if I could grab 30-45 minutes from you either the week of May 15th or May 22nd. Like yourself, I am
trying to change the Federal Mindset when it comes to building, deploying and managing software.
I hope you can understand my persistence. Open Source software is changing the world :)
Cheers,
Chad DiMarzo
Hybrid Cloud Strategist - Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
Direct (703)748-4458 <tel:%28703%29748-4458>
(b) (6)
[email protected]
www.linkedin.com/in/chaddimarzo <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-
3A__tracking.cirrusinsight.com_88de4273-2D3887-2D4799-2D805f-2Dc4f0d959c49f_urldefense-2Dproofpoint-2Dcom-
2Dv2-2Durl12&d=DwMFaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=TiFajvzHRy70agrmP8N9c-
637_VamityuwkjVdY_OXE&m=6tkhbGAXzJjFsEqMq-jWKRBatJ1FV-cFJjS9rSKkN1E&s=OzMgdmQDuWxn-
IN1jRuRUJyiMCb1NTgLRWXuvqOkgcI&e=>
What
is your Docker Container Strategy? <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-
3A__tracking.cirrusinsight.com_88de4273-2D3887-2D4799-2D805f-2Dc4f0d959c49f_urldefense-2Dproofpoint-2Dcom-
2Dv2-2Durl13&d=DwMFaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=TiFajvzHRy70agrmP8N9c-
637_VamityuwkjVdY_OXE&m=6tkhbGAXzJjFsEqMq-jWKRBatJ1FV-cFJjS9rSKkN1E&s=J-
EqLUYxhM302GL0CMz8MPVNB1j_G2pbjCGv7Wp4cwY&e=>
Containers
are Linux- Must Read <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__tracking.cirrusinsight.com_88de4273-
2D3887-2D4799-2D805f-2Dc4f0d959c49f_urldefense-2Dproofpoint-2Dcom-2Dv2-
2Durl14&d=DwMFaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=TiFajvzHRy70agrmP8N9c-
637_VamityuwkjVdY_OXE&m=6tkhbGAXzJjFsEqMq-jWKRBatJ1FV-
cFJjS9rSKkN1E&s=BskOahktPQSCN6RQmlReOz4YGqd6TOWnh-JiqaoDlH8&e=>
On Wed, Apr 12, 2017 at 7:00 AM, Chad DiMarzo <[email protected]> wrote:
David,
The article below from
Nextgov.com <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-
3A__Nextgov.com&d=DwMFaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=TiFajvzHRy70agrmP8N9c-
637_VamityuwkjVdY_OXE&m=6tkhbGAXzJjFsEqMq-jWKRBatJ1FV-cFJjS9rSKkN1E&s=-
pR02a_c0RUEiO8VCa7XsAAeNpqo8NAQFs2llCgklKA&e=> truly shows the hard work and dedication you have put in
place at the FCC around cutting cost and modernizing. I wanted to see if we could set aside some time to discuss your
plans to maximize your Cloud Investment through automation and building
a "Multi-Cloud" strategy. Take a look at the article below where NASA uses an automation tool to maximize their
AWS investment.
http://www.nextgov.com/cloud-computing/2017/03/its-possible-cut-legacy-spending-heres-fcc-did-it/136268/
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__tracking.cirrusinsight.com_88de4273-2D3887-2D4799-2D805f-
2Dc4f0d959c49f_urldefense-2Dproofpoint-2Dcom-2Dv2-
2Durl15&d=DwMFaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=TiFajvzHRy70agrmP8N9c-
637_VamityuwkjVdY_OXE&m=6tkhbGAXzJjFsEqMq-jWKRBatJ1FV-cFJjS9rSKkN1E&s=6CLt-
0fdpnXvNeExltyfNDTiQuq0t_SkQp-JlTpuPKg&e=>
NASA INCREASING CLOUD EFFICIENCY WITH ANSIBLE TOWER:
https://www.ansible.com/hubfs/pdf/Ansible-Case-Study-NASA.pdf?t=1491938374901
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__tracking.cirrusinsight.com_88de4273-2D3887-2D4799-2D805f-
2Dc4f0d959c49f_urldefense-2Dproofpoint-2Dcom-2Dv2-
2Durl16&d=DwMFaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=TiFajvzHRy70agrmP8N9c-
637_VamityuwkjVdY_OXE&m=6tkhbGAXzJjFsEqMq-jWKRBatJ1FV-
cFJjS9rSKkN1E&s=lsKHVCqdgYE5kTToT0P7A96BhBWLUQqhE3kQzwf1ahQ&e=>
How does the afternoon of 4/24 or 4/25 look?
Let me know either way.
Thanks,
Chad DiMarzo
Account Executive- Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
Direct (703)748-4458 <tel:%28703%29748-4458>
(b) (6)
[email protected]
www.linkedin.com/in/chaddimarzo <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-
3A__tracking.cirrusinsight.com_88de4273-2D3887-2D4799-2D805f-2Dc4f0d959c49f_urldefense-2Dproofpoint-2Dcom-
2Dv2-2Durl17&d=DwMFaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=TiFajvzHRy70agrmP8N9c-
637_VamityuwkjVdY_OXE&m=6tkhbGAXzJjFsEqMq-jWKRBatJ1FV-
cFJjS9rSKkN1E&s=UPYCwzk4cGKR_QhAf47q11IOHRdzYqz_0foNkYXODuQ&e=>
What
is your Docker Container Strategy? <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-
3A__tracking.cirrusinsight.com_88de4273-2D3887-2D4799-2D805f-2Dc4f0d959c49f_urldefense-2Dproofpoint-2Dcom-
2Dv2-2Durl18&d=DwMFaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=TiFajvzHRy70agrmP8N9c-
637_VamityuwkjVdY_OXE&m=6tkhbGAXzJjFsEqMq-jWKRBatJ1FV-cFJjS9rSKkN1E&s=3mOXrh0luPmJ-
Y0kLBLQCT_HVcITicoYQFj7SMqCpMg&e=>
From: Chad DiMarzo
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: Nice Work at the FCC
Date: Wednesday, May 17, 2017 12:02:44 PM
David,
Have you seen the invite for DevNation? Figured I could use this as an opportunity to share with you and
maybe you can pass along to your #ChangeAgents so they can take advantage of the event as well.
Who is running Docker Containers in the Federal Government? Join us on Thursday, June 8th in
Washington, DC for DevNation. USCIS Director of Dev Rob Brown, Director of Security Adrian Monza
and Director of Ops Steve Grunch will be co-presenting at DevNation on their story with DevOpSec and
their deployment of Docker with OpenShift.
http://devnationfederal.org/#welcome
Chad DiMarzo
Hybrid Cloud Strategist - Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
(b) (6)
[email protected]
www.linkedin.com/in/chaddimarzo
What is your Docker Container Strategy?
Containers are Linux- Must Read
Uttam and Byron- Nice to meet you. I wanted to discuss with you the ECFS Application. I
hope everything is okay after the DDoS incidents.
I would like to meet with you both and discuss how Red Hat can help the FCC Optimize the
ECFS. I am hearing that ECFS is deployed using docker containers on Red Hat Servers. Red
Hat has a technology related to docker containers that allow the FCC to further increase
optimization (operations and cost). It also allows "running your containers at scale", and
under security "patching hundreds to thousands of containers when vulnerabilities hit",
along with running your CI/CD pipelines within containers.
I will be at the FCC next Monday afternoon 5/15 meeting with the operations folks who run
Red Hat on the infrastructure side of the house. What does your schedule look like before
1:30pm or after 2:30pm.
Cheers,
Chad DiMarzo
Hybrid Cloud Strategist - Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
Direct (703)748-4458
(b) (6)
[email protected]
www.linkedin.com/in/chaddimarzo
What is your Docker Container Strategy?
Containers are Linux- Must Read
Certainly on ECFS the two best #ChangeAgents to discuss this with would be ACIO for
Tailored Platforms Uttam Kumar and Senior Advisor Byron Caswell, both cc'ed. Share
your proposal and see what they think as possible next steps.
Many thanks,
-d:
David,
This is great advice. One of the many reasons I like supporting the FCC, is all of the
content you mentioned that I can soak up regarding technology initiatives.
I have done some homework over the last few weeks concerning the ECFS Application.
I would like to meet with her to discuss how Red Hat can help the FCC Optimize ECFS. I
am hearing that ECFS is deployed in docker containers on Red Hat Servers. Red Hat has a
technology related to docker containers that allow the FCC to further increase
optimization (operations and cost). It also increases security while optimizing the
application environment. Below would be the proposed agenda for the meeting:
Demo:
1.) Ease of deployment ( Preventing duplicated work and deployment failures)**
2.) Responding to business needs and requirements faster
3.) Security around Linux Based containers in the cloud
This is one example of ways I try to add value around the Federal Government.
Government Leadership as you mentioned, does not have time to tell industry what they
are doing. It is my job to find out.
Chad DiMarzo
Hybrid Cloud Strategist - Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
Direct (703)748-4458
(b) (6)
[email protected]
www.linkedin.com/in/chaddimarzo
What is your Docker Container Strategy?
Containers are Linux- Must Read
My advice:
* Read more about what we're doing and our strategy, hear some of our folks speak at
different events, get to understand what you can from the open (and we have a lot in
the open) about what we're doing and our challenges
* Then come with a specific pitch to show a solution that could address those specific
challenges via a demo in our Technology Experience Center. Show, like you would to a
VC, what value could be provided.
* Then we'll make our time -- otherwise we get 60-70 cold call emails + 10-12 voice calls
a day, especially right about now w/ Congress finally approving a budget. What we're
looking for is not someone that wants us to make time to explain what we're doing to
them -- rather someone who can research and learn what we're doing and make a
specific pitch based on what's out there from events we've spoken at and shared our
challenges.
David,
I know you contributed to our Government Symposium last year, so it would be great to
get you involved sometime soon with all of the events we have coming up. I have a few
things in mind and will get back to you with some ideas.
In the meantime as long as you're okay with it, I plan to reach out to your Deputy CIO for Tech
Christine Calvosa in hopes of discussing Multi-Cloud and Open Source strategies. Any advice you
could share around engaging with her would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
Chad DiMarzo
Hybrid Cloud Strategist - Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
Direct (703)748-4458
(b) (6)
[email protected]
www.linkedin.com/in/chaddimarzo
What is your Docker Container Strategy?
Containers are Linux- Must Read
I'd love to chat however I'm booked for that Friday -- perhaps in the future?
Best regards.
David,
I might have a great opportunity to share in a public venue, with Red Hat, industry,
and with a few of your government peers.
I should have offered this to you earlier, but here are the details:
MeriTalk is hosting a Federal Executive round table on the morning of Friday, May
19th from 8:00am-10:00am. Arun Oberoi, the VP of all sales and services for Red Hat
will be a participant at this breakfast roundtable and it would be great for you to
participate in conversations with other thought leaders in relation to Innovation, Open
Source and Open Government.
Chad DiMarzo
Hybrid Cloud Strategist - Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
Direct (703)748-4458
(b) (6)
[email protected]
www.linkedin.com/in/chaddimarzo
What is your Docker Container Strategy?
Containers are Linux- Must Read
Hi Chad,
I have to be cautious about giving advice that isn't public or shared with other
vendors. Perhaps we could meet at a future public event?
Best regards,
-d.
Hi David,
I wanted to follow up on the email below and see if either of those times worked for
you, I tentatively blocked them off if they do.
Cheers,
Chad DiMarzo
Hybrid Cloud Strategist - Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
Direct (703)748-4458
(b) (6)
[email protected]
www.linkedin.com/in/chaddimarzo
On Wed, Apr 26, 2017 at 8:42 AM, Chad DiMarzo <[email protected]> wrote:
Good Morning David,
I wanted to see if I could grab 30-45 minutes from you either the week of May
15th or May 22nd. Like yourself, I am trying to change the Federal Mindset when
it comes to building, deploying and managing software.
I hope you can understand my persistence. Open Source software is changing the
world :)
I look forward to your response.
Cheers,
Chad DiMarzo
Hybrid Cloud Strategist - Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
Direct (703)748-4458
(b) (6)
[email protected]
www.linkedin.com/in/chaddimarzo
The article below from Nextgov.com truly shows the hard work and dedication
you have put in place at the FCC around cutting cost and modernizing. I wanted
to see if we could set aside some time to discuss your plans to maximize your
Cloud Investment through automation and building a "Multi-Cloud" strategy.
Take a look at the article below where NASA uses an automation tool to
maximize their AWS investment.
http://www.nextgov.com/cloud-computing/2017/03/its-possible-cut-legacy-
spending-heres-fcc-did-it/136268/
https://www.ansible.com/hubfs/pdf/Ansible-Case-Study-NASA.pdf?
t=1491938374901
Thanks,
Chad DiMarzo
Account Executive- Federal Civilian Agencies
Red Hat, Inc - Public Sector
Direct (703)748-4458
(b) (6)
[email protected]
www.linkedin.com/in/chaddimarzo
I'm a nobody on the way to somewhere. I'm big but not big enough. I'm a superstar and I've got a new release and
you've got to HELP ME!
Like me, share my post, listen on Spotify, subjugate your own interests on behalf of mine.
Oliver has created a club, a tribe, a group of believers who will follow him anywhere and do anything for him. But
he doesn't ask for anything for himself. Instead, he motivates his people in a cause! And if you know anything about
millennials, you know they're cause-driven. Every business has a charity component. Assets are secondary,
otherwise they'd all be in pursuit of hot iron instead of living in L.A. without cars and taking Uber, unthinkable to
their parents. It's all about meaning and belonging.
So during the show he's a ringleader. Pointing out the inanities of society. Going into depth on abuses you might be
unaware of. Actually, it's not that different from the Howard Stern paradigm, but Howard keeps himself separate, he
keeps wanting to take himself out of the equation, pointing out problems that piss him off but not imploring his
audience to take action. But when he does...
Stern moves mountains. His fans buy products, he helped Christie Todd Whitman get elected. Stern has a better
bond with his audience than any rock star.
And John Oliver's got that same essence. But his game is to use his power for the common good.
Net neutrality. No one cares anymore. Kind of like privacy. We can't fight the same war over and over and over
again. Hell, Oliver himself has already done a long segment on net neutrality.
Only this time, after pointing out how the government makes it so hard to express your displeasure, he reveals a
shortcut, wherein you can go directly to the site he created, click once and be brought to the page where you can tell
the FCC where to go.
It's ingenious. It's like hanging with your high school buddies and hearing someone reveal a great prank and saying
I'M DOWN WITH THAT, LET'S DO IT!
Yes, there is a sense of humor, which none of those in Washington have whatsoever. We can run rings around them
if we just unite and use our brains.
Hell, look at music festivals. The lineup is announced AFTER tickets go on sale! Proving that the festival itself is a
greater attraction than the talent.
Think about this. You're nothing without your audience, but your audience no longer wants to be passive, and it's
only tweens who pay mindless fealty to entertainers. Whereas modern masters can move mountains and burnish
their own image by focusing on the EXTERNAL!
It's not as simple as donating a dollar a ticket to charity.
It's got to be active. On both sides, both the performer and the audience member.
Furthermore, the first time Oliver attacked net neutrality his acolytes crashed the government servers. Which had
them doing dances in their brains, they stuck it to the man, the somnambulant press covered the story. That's right,
the media just reports, WE MAKE THE NEWS!
And you too can make it. If like John Oliver you harness the power of your audience not for yourself, but for good.
"Net Neutrality II: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver": https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-
3A__www.youtube.com_watch-3Fv-3D92vuuZt7wak-26utm-5Fsource-3Dphplist5839-26utm-5Fmedium-3Demail-
26utm-5Fcontent-3Dtext-26utm-5Fcampaign-3DThe-2BOliver-
2BParadigm&d=DwIBaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=vxwn-
Qb33ct3Pe2mCULdYz12P7TGUx5gEvW1Me8mJOo&m=xpqgf7uEFrwaza45BLbpJTO9-
lu9ucPYL4dHJAeviFE&s=AnheoXD6kNW6FSj-61WixBub3_HAWBgfrLVrGW916iI&e=
You can watch the whole thing, or forward to fifteen minutes in, where he says "So sadly, it seems once more, we
the people must take this matter into our own hands"
P.S. Google News shows over 100,000 links on the search "john oliver net neutrality." Want to reach people? Don't
make it about you, make it about EVERYBODY!
--
Visit the archive: https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__lefsetz.com_wordpress_-3Futm-5Fsource-
3Dphplist5839-26utm-5Fmedium-3Demail-26utm-5Fcontent-3Dtext-26utm-5Fcampaign-3DThe-2BOliver-
2BParadigm&d=DwIBaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=vxwn-
Qb33ct3Pe2mCULdYz12P7TGUx5gEvW1Me8mJOo&m=xpqgf7uEFrwaza45BLbpJTO9-
lu9ucPYL4dHJAeviFE&s=2_dCOlF9HPj9C8Ot8UL8DMSv4jJkqQ7fqyhJIUXIb0M&e=
--
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.twitter.com_lefsetz-3Futm-5Fsource-3Dphplist5839-
26utm-5Fmedium-3Demail-26utm-5Fcontent-3Dtext-26utm-5Fcampaign-3DThe-2BOliver-
2BParadigm&d=DwIBaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=vxwn-
Qb33ct3Pe2mCULdYz12P7TGUx5gEvW1Me8mJOo&m=xpqgf7uEFrwaza45BLbpJTO9-
lu9ucPYL4dHJAeviFE&s=5blix0rL4XKGKiCP2fHZs4CQb3hIQsRS0TZOXCoY4H0&e=
--
If you would like to subscribe to the LefsetzLetter,
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.lefsetz.com_lists_-3Fp-3Dsubscribe-26id-3D1-26utm-
5Fsource-3Dphplist5839-26utm-5Fmedium-3Demail-26utm-5Fcontent-3Dtext-26utm-5Fcampaign-3DThe-
2BOliver-2BParadigm&d=DwIBaQ&c=y0h0omCe0jAUGr4gAQ02Fw&r=vxwn-
Qb33ct3Pe2mCULdYz12P7TGUx5gEvW1Me8mJOo&m=xpqgf7uEFrwaza45BLbpJTO9-
lu9ucPYL4dHJAeviFE&s=f6cuVWadSgaG8c03w9E6j1DJYS4xE9f3v1Gk8lqpBUM&e=
Please chip in $10 to help save the internet. Every dollar you give gets us closer to our
goal of raising $100K in 100 days for this crucial fight.
Ajit,
You know how FCC Chairman Ajit Pai is plotting to kill Net Neutrality? And how, if he gets away
with it, we’ll lose the most important platform we have for free speech, dissent and resisting
Trump’s authoritarian policies?
That’s why we’re working 24/7 to make sure Pai’s plan fails. The good news is, we just got a big
boost from John Oliver. After the comedian’s segment on Net Neutrality1 aired, so many
people flooded the FCC with comments opposing Pai’s scheme that the agency’s
site crashed.2 And yesterday, a full quarter of the Senate3 signed on to a series of
letters slamming Pai’s plan, including more than a dozen women senators who cited
the crucial importance of Net Neutrality for women organizers and women-owned
businesses.
That’s a great start, but to defeat Pai millions more people will need to speak up in the weeks
ahead. Our organizers are rallying folks across the country to fight back but we need to do more
— and fast — to win. We’re aiming to raise $100K in small donations in the next 100 days to
pump up our defense of Net Neutrality, and need your help to pull it off.
Ajit, please chip in $10 today to help save the internet, free speech and our power to
resist Trump’s dangerous policies.
I don’t have to tell you that these are scary times. The Trump administration is demonizing the
press, cracking down on dissent and — as the firing of FBI Director James Comey shows —
threatening the rights of independent law enforcement agencies to conduct investigations. This
is not what democracy looks like.
We can’t fight any of this without the open internet. Please chip in $10 or more today to
save Net Neutrality.
When people use the open internet to organize, we pose a serious threat to Pai’s agenda —
and he knows it. And the bigger and louder we get, the more we threaten Trump’s agenda —
and he knows it. That’s why Net Neutrality has been among the Trump
administration’s top targets from the get-go.
Don’t let Pai and Trump win: Donate $10 or more to save Net Neutrality.
We’ve won this fight before and with your help, we can do it again. Thanks so much.
Carrie, Candace and the rest of the Free Press Action Fund team
freepress.net
1. "Net Neutrality II," Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, May 7, 2017:
https://act.freepress.net/go/16836?t=8&akid=6394.10676279.SaFSWx
2. "John Oliver Tackles Net Neutrality Again, Crashes FCC Comments Site — Again," Ars
Technica, May 8, 2017: https://act.freepress.net/go/16839?t=10&akid=6394.10676279.SaFSWx
3. "25 Percent of the Senate Speaks Out for Real Net Neutrality," Free Press Action Fund, May
9, 2017: https://act.freepress.net/go/16840?t=12&akid=6394.10676279.SaFSWx
The Free Press Action Fund is a nonpartisan organization fighting for your rights to connect and
communicate. The Free Press Action Fund does not support or oppose any candidate for public
office. Learn more at freepress.net.
FYI John Oliver did a net neutrality segment tonight and urged viewers to comment
From: Lauren Wilson <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, May 7, 2017 11:58 PM
To: Lauren Wilson
Subject: Tweet by Last Week Tonight on Twitter
Thanks. Actually, I decided the show itself is kind of beside the point for this article. My
perspective is to demonstrate the kind of issues that CIOs face.
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 7:16 PM, Mark Wigfield <[email protected]> wrote:
Can you also send me a link to the show that kicked all this off? Thanks again.
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:35 PM, Michael Krigsman <[email protected]> wrote:
Thanks!
On Thu, May 18, 2017 at 6:24 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
+Here's a slightly shorter URL redirect for the bulk upload option:
https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
And here’s a link to a page with the bulk filing mechanism https://www.fcc.gov/restoring-
internet-freedom-comments-wc-docket-no-17-108
From: David Bray
Sent: Thursday, May 18, 2017 5:57 PM
To: [email protected]; Mark Wigfield <[email protected]>
Subject: API documentation
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/public-api-docs.html
From: Mark Stone
To: James Brown
Subject: RE: article
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2017 10:17:00 AM
(b) (5)
(b)http://freebeacon.com/issues/john-olivers-net-neutrality-campaign-filled-bots-fake-
(5)
comments-racist-attacks-fcc-chairman/
(b) (5)
(b)http://freebeacon.com/issues/john-olivers-net-neutrality-campaign-filled-bots-fake-
(5)
comments-racist-attacks-fcc-chairman/
http://freebeacon.com/issues/john-olivers-net-neutrality-campaign-filled-bots-fake-
comments-racist-attacks-fcc-chairman/
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Good Afternoon,
My name is Melissa and I am very concerned about the FCC's claims that there was a DDoS
attack around the exact same time John Oliver's segments about net neutrality hit the air. It
seems extremely coincidental. The public deserves to know what happened, and in order for
that to happen, the FCC has to release its logs to independent security analysts so that we
know what actually happened. Otherwise, everyone will believe the FCC and Ajit Pai are
lying about the DDoS attacks.
Thank you.
-Melissa Kadri
From: David Bray
To: (b) (6)
Subject: Re: DDOS lies, Protect Net Neutrality
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 12:06:43 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
From:(
b
Sent: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 12:03
To: David Bray
Subject: DDOS lies, Protect Net Neutrality
My Name is Robert Beitner, I live in Chicago IL and am a citizen of the United States. You’re being
intentionally misleading, and trying to claim that the surge in traffic from large numbers of people
attempting to access your site through John Oliver’s GoFCCYourself.com redirect amounts to a
“DDoS” attack, to let yourselves off the hook for essentially silencing large numbers of people by not
having a properly functioning site to receive comments from the public about an important issue. If
you really claim that you were attacked then release your logs for an independent security analysis
or drop this. Its your job to serve the public and we are demanding you keep and protect Obama era
Net Neutrality, it is not something that’s up for discussion. Now do your job and listen to us.
Mr. Pai..
After seeing a segment about net neutrality on Last Week with John Oliver, I decided I had to
write.
It seems that you are trying to put the policing of the ISP providers in their own hands. Has
that ever worked?
When has an industry ever policed itself when profits are at stake? It seems to me that this is
the reason we have
regulations in the first place!
Preserve Title II !!!!!
Darcy McCartney
Kauai, HI
From: (b) (6)
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Don"t be scared ! # John Oliver
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2017 2:56:03 AM
Consequently please ensure my opinion is considered as being against changes in title 2, and to continue in the
regulatory system we exist in today.
Sincerely,
Trish Lurie
This message has been sent from my iPhone, please excuse any voice to type errors.
Patricia Lurie RN, MBA
Director Nursing
Beaumont Health- Royal Oak
________________________________
Confidentiality Notice:
This e-mail, including any attachments is the property of Beaumont Health and is intended for the sole use of the
intended recipient(s). It may contain information that is privileged and confidential. Any unauthorized review, use,
disclosure, or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please delete this message, and reply to
the sender regarding the error in a separate email.
Nothing in this message is intended to constitute an electronic signature unless a specific statement to the contrary is
included in this message.
From: Hilary Sprangers
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: FCC Mission and Values
Date: Thursday, May 18, 2017 2:16:04 PM
Good afternoon,
I was just watching Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, and wanted to contact the FCC
about net neutrality rules, as he suggested in his May 7 episode. I understand that the contact
form was flooded with replies, and was removed from the website. I also understand that the
purpose of the contact form, and its replacement with email, is to locate individuals on the
internet that are able to investigate government and corporate actions. Being that the stated
purpose of the FCC is to regulate interstate and international communication by radio,
television, wire, satellite and cable, I'm wondering why the FCC is spending its valuable time
searching for people on the internet that are looking into illegal activities. I'm concerned that
locating these whistle-blowers could put them in danger, and hide the truth of what may be
occurring, which makes it more difficult for the FCC to regulate interstate and international
communication. Thank you for taking the time to read my grievance.
Hilary Sprangers
From: Ajit Pai
To: R Wolf
Subject: Re: FCC Proceeding 17-108
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 1:04:33 AM
Thanks!
From: R Wolf
Sent: Monday, May 8, 2017 1:01 AM
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: FCC Proceeding 17-108
We stand with John Oliver in his exposure of your blatant abuse of your position and
ignorance of this proceeding.
You are a ridiculous human being in all senses and we do not support you.
Your dishonesty goes beyond damaging your reputation and person, but also adds to the
growing proof of the dishonest and shockingly misguided administration you represent.
Regards
The Wolfs
From: Carleton Robinson
To: David Bray
Subject: Re: FCC website brought down by John Oliver"s campaign
Date: Friday, May 12, 2017 10:24:42 AM
Attachments: Logo.png
Absolutely. Thank you very much for that clarification. If we can be of assistance in the
future, please don't hesitate to reach out.
Best,
Carleton Robinson
Regional Director - Enterprise/Federal Sales
Distil Networks
C: (b) (6)
O: 703-910-3516
On Fri, May 12, 2017 at 10:07 AM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Carleton,
Right now FCC's rules do not include a policy of blocking either duplicate comments or bots.
Nor do we test if someone is a human or not because some groups in the past have claimed
they're filing saved comments on behalf of other humans. It's a legal decision, not an IT one.
-d.
Dr. Bray,
Thanks for the response and clarification. The identical words in many of your comments is
a sign of spam bots leveraged against the FCC. We understand and can fight those bots so
you get a true sense of what the public is trying to communicate to you.
Here are two pieces of information I think you and your team might find helpful.
1) how we help Drupal fight spam bots (since FCC uses Drupal as well):
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4-2cJmLyxNRaUw3eVJGMWE2RHc/view?usp=sharing
2) how we help customers manage and secure APIs from overrunning their processes:
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1edI4uyV5jipR6f5A1iRgHJaVzMM2M
mlRnVBQcUubZkY/edit#slide=id.g1ca7136d48_0_0
Would it make sense for us to brief you or your Drupal/security team on our solution and
how we can help the FCC fulfill it's mission to receive valid communications with the public?
We'd be happy to give you a 30 minute demo of our solution.
Thanks.
Carleton Robinson
Regional Director - Enterprise/Federal Sales
Distil Networks
C: (b) (6)
O: 703-910-3516
On Thu, May 11, 2017 at 11:55 PM, David Bray <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Carleston, the website was up -- just that the bombardment denied service to others. If
you are curious as to what is happening, there has always been an alternative easy to use
website at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file comments from
should you find the ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. We have noticed some bulk
filers of lots of comments are using the individual mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in
bulk vs. the bulk mechanism above, potentially making it difficult for individuals to
file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-
neutrality-battle-1494533379
This is the challenge where you permit APIs. Hope this helps.
Dr. Bray,
I understand that John Oliver has turned his fans onto the FCC website to protest proposed changes to Net Neutrality. I
also see from CNBC that these fans may have brought down your site. (http://www.cnbc.com/2017/05/09/fcc-john-
oliver-net-neutrality-plea-may-have-brought-down-fcc-site.html)
I believe we can help you and I am requesting a meeting with you or your team to discuss Distil Networks. Our bot
mitigation solution would help the FCC could fulfill its mission properly by eliminating bot traffic while allowing
legitimate human input to your comments page.
Would you be interested in a 15 minute discussion on how Distil Networks could help you identify bots and give you a
true indication of legitimate human comments about your issues.
Please let me know if you're available for a 10-15 minute discussion on bot mitigation this week or there is someone
within the FCC we can present our solution to.
Very respectfully,
Carleton Robinson
Regional Director - Enterprise/Federal Sales
Distil Networks
C: (b) (6)
O: 703-910-3516
<Logo.png>
Video Overview: Learn About Distil Networks In Under Two Minutes
From: [email protected]
To: Carleton Robinson
Subject: Re: FCC website brought down by John Oliver"s campaign
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2017 11:55:36 PM
Hi Carleston, the website was up -- just that the bombardment denied service to others. If you
are curious as to what is happening, there has always been an alternative easy to use website
at https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments to file comments from should you find the
ECFS site busy responding to high traffic. We have noticed some bulk filers of lots of
comments are using the individual mechanism (ECFS) to file comments in bulk vs. the bulk
mechanism above, potentially making it difficult for individuals to
file. https://www.wsj.com/articles/bots-denial-of-service-are-latest-weapons-in-net-neutrality-
battle-1494533379
This is the challenge where you permit APIs. Hope this helps.
Dr. Bray,
I understand that John Oliver has turned his fans onto the FCC website to protest proposed changes to Net Neutrality. I also
see from CNBC that these fans may have brought down your site. (http://www.cnbc.com/2017/05/09/fcc-john-oliver-net-
neutrality-plea-may-have-brought-down-fcc-site.html)
I believe we can help you and I am requesting a meeting with you or your team to discuss Distil Networks. Our bot
mitigation solution would help the FCC could fulfill its mission properly by eliminating bot traffic while allowing legitimate
human input to your comments page.
I did some cursory investigation on your comments page (https://www fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?proceedings name=17-
108&sort=date_disseminated,DESC) and clearly 13 out of 25 of the comments were filled out with form language, which is
an indication of bots trying to skew your comments analytics and spamming your website.
Would you be interested in a 15 minute discussion on how Distil Networks could help you identify bots and give you a true
indication of legitimate human comments about your issues.
Please let me know if you're available for a 10-15 minute discussion on bot mitigation this week or there is someone within
the FCC we can present our solution to.
Very respectfully,
Carleton Robinson
Regional Director - Enterprise/Federal Sales
Distil Networks
C: (b) (6)
O: 703-910-3516
<Logo.png>
Video Overview: Learn About Distil Networks In Under Two Minutes
From: Wilson Vediner
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: I can"t access the proceeding 17-108
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 1:02:40 AM
Hi,
I've recently watched an episode of John Oliver and his HBO program has alerted me to the
possibility and, given our current administration's penchant for annihilating important populist
protections (eg ACHA, threatened budgetary reductions to the NEA, PBS, Planned
Parenthood, our publicly owned National Park system, etc.) that yourself and perhaps more of
the FCC are willing to reduce protections and regulations for major cable and internet
providers to restrict and reduce the neutrality of the internet and it's content. I can't access the
correct proceeding to complain and so I am sending an email to you directly.
Please. Please leave the internet alone. It's full of awful, deplorable garbage, but it's our
garbage. It's the garbage of democracy. Leave it alone. Leave us all alone in our weird and
necessary self-expression. We the people already lost radio, lost television, and so losing our
likely last mass effort as a species at neutrality against corporations working hard to enthrall
us in a spell of cultural banality is a bridge I think no one on either side of the political
spectrum is willing to cross.
Best,
Wilson Vediner
From: Dorothy Boritz
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: John Oliver
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 11:04:56 AM
He seemed to make sense. Please protect MY internet in accordance with the mandate of your job!
Hello,
Gofccyourself.com man
From: Kristen Brannock
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: KEEP NET NEUTRALITY AND SHAME ON YOU
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 8:32:51 AM
We know what you've done to your website: made the process extremely arduous and now
you've disabled the ability to leave comments. Shame on you. We are watching and you won't
get away with blocking our voices.
Spineless asshole.
And John Oliver's mug is bigger and more famous. You just look like a fucking idiot with
yours.
--
Kristen Brannock, MPH
Mr. Pai,
What John Oliver said.... Because I agree that companies cannot be trusted to do the right thing!!
Sincerely,
Wendy Boswell
Chesapeake, VA
Please keep it. We need it. It protects the public. Don't repleal it.
Please watch the new John Oliver video for plenty of information on why we need it:
https://youtu.be/92vuuZt7wak
So I back net neutrality with Title 2 enforcement. Please keep it. Thank you!
From: David Bray
To: (b) (6)
Subject: Links
Date: Sunday, May 21, 2017 9:03:47 PM
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?
filers_name=Net%20Neutrality&proceedings_name=17-108&sort=date_disseminated,DESC
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?
filers_name=The%20Internet&proceedings_name=17-108&sort=date_disseminated,DESC
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?
filers_name=net%20neutrality&proceedings_name=17-108&sort=date_disseminated,DESC
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?filers_name=MyNameJeff&proceedings_name=17-
108&sort=date_disseminated,DESC
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?filers_name=John%20Oliver&proceedings_name=17-
108&sort=date_disseminated,DESC
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?filers_name=Title%20II&proceedings_name=17-
108&sort=date_disseminated,DESC
From: Keith Chobot
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: More Money? More Control?
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 4:11:28 PM
Dear Mr Pai:
I have written recently at the request of Mozilla. Now I am writing at the request of of John Oliver.
Equal access to the internet/world wide web for everyone seems fair. Giving large companies the ability to control
access through fees does not seem fair.
Sincerely,
Keith Chobot
From: Bill Mascari
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net Neutrality
Date: Monday, May 15, 2017 8:15:59 AM
I support the current net neutrality rules as recently identified by John Oliver!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Virus-free. www.avast.com
From: Jill Sanders
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: net neutrality
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 11:18:05 PM
Unfortunately, it is impossible to keep up with all of the improprieties that We The People are up against with this
administration and those making decisions for us. I thank goodness for people like John Oliver who keep a
microscope on all of your doings.
We will get "those people” out by using our voices in the best way we can.
What a Mess!
Deborah Viscomi
From: Andrew Galdi
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net neutrality
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 4:34:45 PM
President Trump’s FCC chairman, Ajit Pai, is moving forward with his plan to destroy Obama-era Net Neutrality
regulations. But before the FCC stops regulating internet providers as it does other public utilities — under the Title
II provision of the Telecommunications Act — the agency is soliciting public feedback. YOUR feedback.
Go to gofccyourself.com, set up by John Oliver's Last Week Tonight and let your voice be heard!
I fully support the existing Net Neutrality rules, which classify internet service providers under the Title II
provision of the Telecommunications Act. Please DO NOT roll back ANY of these regulations.
I would like to emphasize in particular paragraph 82, which asks for input on whether throttling should be
regulated. In the past ISPs have throttled content based on their own determination of what was lawful or
permissible, and had to be forced to stop in the courts. Isn’t it possible they could do this again? I’m also concerned
by mobile providers who say a plan is “unlimited,” but when you exceed the data cap, only throttle sites and services
that aren’t part of their approved zero-rating network. Thanks for reading my comment.
Best,
Andrew
From: David Bray
To: Collins Walker
Subject: Re: Net Neutrality
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 1:42:37 PM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
I was upset to read your characterization of attempts by the public to file comments to the FCC, today in the Los
Angeles Times, as denial of service attacks. “'These actors were not attempting to file complains themselves; rather,
they made it difficult for legitimate commenters to access and file with the FCC,' Bray said.”
This kind of comment might please your bosses but they anger the public. I more imagine that the John Oliver show
“Last Week Tonight,” merely spurred a number of people like me to try and comment at the same time. You
probably realized that also but chose to portray it as some kind of nefarious hacker attack.
On a personal level I would like you to take a moment to consider people, such as yourself, who are in positions of
power, who are allowing themselves to choose party over country, corporations over people and the goals of the
rich over the best interests of the common man. Please try to think morally.
Sincerely,
—Collins Walker
P.S. I do think the FCC also needs to make the comment process easier for the public. Right now it is very hard to
make a comment and even harder to know if you did it correctly and effectively.
From: [email protected]
To: Sam Nevens
Subject: Re: Net Neutrality
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 9:19:49 AM
Hi Sam,
There has always been the option to use this simple option to file comments as
well: https://www.fcc.gov/internet-freedom-comments
Unfortunately, the FCC has made it impossible for a complaint regarding Net Neutrality to be filed on their
website via a mobile device. This, as well as the claim that the FCC was under a DDoS attack, when
likely they were just overwhelmed by the amount of people who wanted to file a complaint, is the reason
you are getting emails from concerned citizens.
If you'd like me to pass the info over to the person directing others to contact you via this email regarding
the issue, I highly suggest first fixing the FCC complaint page to accept mobile users as well as a higher
number of users at one time...
Thank you.
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media
Relations. Whomever is suggesting you email this address has the incorrect POC.
I'm calling for the FCC to release its logs to independent security analysts regarding the alleged DDoS
attack. If you guys had any sense at all you may realize that either....
1) The FCC is being intentionally misleading, and trying to claim that the surge in traffic from large
numbers of people attempting to access their site through John Oliver’s GoFCCYourself.com redirect
amounts to a “DDoS” attack, to let themselves off the hook for essentially silencing large numbers of
people by not having a properly functioning site to receive comments from the public about an important
issue, or—worst case—is preparing a bogus legal argument that somehow John Oliver’s show itself was
the DDoS attack.
2) Someone actually did DDoS the FCC’s site at the exact same time as John Oliver’s segment, in order
to actively prevent people from being able to comment in support of keeping the Title II net neutrality rules
many of us fought for in 2015.
Do you really want your children to grow up in a world where they can't access information someone else
determined isn't useful or vital or equal?
From: [email protected]
To: Sam Nevens
Subject: Re: Net Neutrality
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 8:50:36 AM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
Whomever is suggesting you email this address has the incorrect POC.
I'm calling for the FCC to release its logs to independent security analysts regarding the alleged DDoS
attack. If you guys had any sense at all you may realize that either....
1) The FCC is being intentionally misleading, and trying to claim that the surge in traffic from large
numbers of people attempting to access their site through John Oliver’s GoFCCYourself.com redirect
amounts to a “DDoS” attack, to let themselves off the hook for essentially silencing large numbers of
people by not having a properly functioning site to receive comments from the public about an important
issue, or—worst case—is preparing a bogus legal argument that somehow John Oliver’s show itself was
the DDoS attack.
2) Someone actually did DDoS the FCC’s site at the exact same time as John Oliver’s segment, in order
to actively prevent people from being able to comment in support of keeping the Title II net neutrality rules
many of us fought for in 2015.
Do you really want your children to grow up in a world where they can't access information someone else
determined isn't useful or vital or equal?
From: Kathleen Kuhlmann
To: Ajit Pai; Mignon Clyburn; Mike ORielly; Campaignlaw
Subject: NET NEUTRALITY
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 1:30:14 AM
I do not agree with you leading the charge to roll back net neutrality as President
Trump’s new FCC Chair, Ajit Pai, a former lawyer for Verizon. I do not agree with your
suggestion that ISPs could simply promise not to obstruct or slow consumer access
to websites in their terms of services (those long technical rules that no one reads),
and as Jon Oliver noted recently, “That would make net neutrality as binding as a
proposal on The Bachelor.”
Kathleen Kuhlmann
From: Jay Myerson
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net neutrality
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 11:00:39 PM
I urge you to preserve net neutrality and not cowtow to big business even though you once worked for Verizon.
Alternatively, I urge you to recuse yourself from these deliberations based on conflict of interest.
Jay
By the way, I agree with John Oliver.
I agree with John Oliver and he told me to write you to maintain net neutrality. Please don't be
a trump toad. You are better than that and our country deserves better.
Barbara Myerson
From: Winona W. Wendth
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net Neutrality
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 8:52:17 PM
What you are doing (or deciding to do) makes little sense, and where it does, is slimy.
This is yet another way for this administration to make the small businessperson’s life difficult
and squash the hopes of entrepreneurs and start-ups—a rather unAmerican tack to take.
Verizon has stipulated that that this move will not, in fact, hamper infrastructure investment,
but it will allow them to keep citizens from using the internet in a free and open market
(another current administrative strong-arm technique ironically implemented for the sake or
open markets). And that’s just one trans-national big business co-opting everyone else—there
are several.
Better yet: Take a few minutes (if you haven’t, already) to watch what John Oliver has to say
about this. You could use the education.
Lancaster, Massachusetts
“If you would not be forgotten as soon as you are dead, either write something worth
the reading or do things worth the writing.”—Benja. Franklin
From: richard
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net Neutrality
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 8:28:31 PM
Leave the rules alone and keep the internet a level playing field. I am with Senator Al Franken, John
Oliver, and anyone else that believes in playing fair.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Erin Pullum
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net Neutrality
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 6:49:00 PM
Dear Sir:
Extremely Sincerely,
Like your president, you seem incapable of telling the truth. As John Oliver points out, your
ties to Verizon belie your commitment to individual Americans using the Internet.
If you imagine that any thinking person buys your insistence that companies will voluntarily
refrain from obstructing content they are competing with, you are a fool. Those rules you are
so eager to gut are in place to protect us, the consumers. The absence of rules you are pursuing
will protect and boost only corporations. Thanks a lot,.
Candida Pugh
From: Tom Allen
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net Neutrality
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 2:38:11 PM
First let me congratulate you for creating such a difficult site for citizens to use. I used John Oliver’s hand patch,
but I see you have overrode the patch. As a tax paying citizen I want to stress that I am opposed to your effort to
remove the net neutrality regulations currently in place. As a former lawyer for Verizon you seem not to have
successful redirected your energies away from protecting your corporate employer to protecting the nation’s
citizens. As I’m sure you know, when efforts have been made previously to end net neutrality, citizens made their
objections very clear. I continue to object and will continue to object. I will call my senators and my congress
member to ask them to work to protect net neutrality.
Respectfully,
Anthony Barthelemy
From: Eric Romero
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net Neutrality
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 2:36:01 AM
I am an avid fan of John Oliver, and heard about your thought on net neutrality. I am looking
to add my comments online; please ensure that your FCC website is back up ASAP.
Sincerely,
Eric Romero
From: John Ogilvie
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net Neutrality
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 1:27:47 AM
Commissioner,
Opening a legal door that permits service providers to favor traffic based on content is not a hypothetical issue. It is
a real problem. Regulations that protect consumers should not be removed, especially not without open public
discussion of the financial interests that stand to gain from having the regulations gutted. Title II protection is
important.
John Ogilvie
Ogilvie Law Firm
801-706-2546
From: Steven Krawiec
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net Neutrality
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 3:15:53 AM
Please do not loosen restrictions on Title 2 of the Communication Act of 1934. Your reasoning of "We don't see it
happening" is unacceptable and just plain wrong. I do not wish for ISPs to have the right to decide what information
is "correct" for me. Also, thanks to John Oliver, the ECFS page has crashed again or you and your cowards have had
the page removed! That is why you are receiving this email personally.
Dear FCC,
this is so coward of you taking down the John Oliver website gofccyoursef.com. You assholes
have no writes to take away our choice of internet websites and apps.
I used to have verizon, now fuck them, i am switching to something that is not that shady!
SHAME ON YOU!
From: Dallin Gilbert
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net neutrality... And why you are a fucking moron
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 2:58:43 AM
Just literally look at the fuckery of the past and the fact you are a dingo babysitting a child.
Watch Jon Oliver. Also just resign or not be a fucking idiot.
From: Lloyd Gloekler
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Net Nutrality
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 1:48:48 PM
Mr Pai,
The truth about you and net neutrality is out thanks to John Oliver. We will communicate his message with or
without access to your web comments page. I have already sent my objections to my representatives at every level
of government and shared it with my contacts.
I say No to the net neutrality act. Republicans have regulatory rollback wrong, most Regulations were put in place to
protect us from greedy people like you and your former employer, not to stifle innovation or competition.
Without net neutrality, Big Cable would give preferential treatment to big
corporations and stick the rest of us on internet slow lanes.
Gloria Carlton
(b) (6)
From: Louise McAllister
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Preserve
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 11:38:29 PM
I am very concerned about the possibility that Net Neutrality might be opened up again. Please note that I want to
preserve Net Neutrality. If the average citizen understood what this means to their access to a free and open internet,
they too would be concerned. Thanks to John Oliver for bringing it to our attention!
-Diane
I saw clips of you attacking net neutrality and Title II on the John Oliver show last night. It's shocking to see
someone who is supposed to be working for the public trust flaunt their responsibility the way you are. You will be
held accountable for your lack of integrity. Do something now to redeem yourself. You look like a stooge to big
business. Is that how you'd like to be thought of? Do the right thing.
Connie Thompson
From: Emily Talaga
To: CPWG
Subject: PS Clippings (aka cyber clippings)
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 2:33:15 PM
THE HILL: FCC SAYS IT WAS VICTIM OF CYBERATTACK AFTER JOHN OLIVER SHOW
The Federal Communications Commission is claiming its website was hit by a cyberattack late
Sunday night.
http://thehill.com/policy/technology/332414-fcc-says-it-was-victim-of-cyberattack-after-john-
oliver-show
WASHINGTON POST: NSA DIRECTOR DESCRIBES WORST CASE SCENARIO CYBER ATTACK
FOR U.S.
What happens when non-state actors decide that cyber now is an attractive weapon... (1
minute video)
https://www.washingtonpost.com/video/national/nsa-director-describes-worst-case-
scenario-cyber-attack-for-us/2017/05/09/1b81037a-34c8-11e7-ab03-
aa29f656f13e_video.html
http://www.networkworld.com/article/3195339/security/vendors-approve-of-nist-password-
draft.html
IT PRO PORTAL: GOVERNMENT SECTOR NOW NUMBER ONE TARGET FOR CYBER ATTACKS
The manufacturing sector is now on third place with 13 per cent of all attacks while retail,
which used to be the number one target, fell to fourth place with 11 per cent.
http://www.itproportal.com/news/government-sector-now-number-one-target-for-cyber-
attacks/
TECH REPUBLIC: STUDY FINDS CYBERSECURITY PROS ARE HIDING BREACHES, BYPASSING
PROTOCOLS, AND PAYING RANSOMS
http://www.techrepublic.com/article/study-finds-cybersecurity-pros-are-hiding-breaches-
bypassing-protocols-and-paying-ransoms/
PCs can be compromised when Defender scans an e-mail or IM; patch has been issued.
https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2017/05/windows-defender-nscript-remote-
vulnerability/
From: Høgni Petersen
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: Regarding net neutrality.
Date: Monday, May 8, 2017 9:59:20 AM
Dear Ajit,
I saw John Oliver's segment regarding net neutrality today. If what he said is to be believed, and it usually is, you
are a dishonest and unsavory individual.
Vh.
Høgni
From: Jessica Egbert
To: David Bray
Subject: Release your logs to a security researcher
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 2:34:29 PM
David,
What the FCC is doing to Net Neutrality is criminal, and the idea that you had a cyber security
attack on your site at the exact moment that you were likely to experience a high volume of
web traffic due to John Oliver revealing your dismantling of net neutrality is laughable it's so
unlikely to be true. Send your undoctored logs at the time of the "cyber attack" to a bipartisan
objective internet security expert and lets see the truth.
Jessica
From: Mariangeles Sanchez
To: Ajit Pai
Cc: Mignon Clyburn
Subject: Strong neutrality
Date: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 8:59:31 PM
In short I support strong neutrality rules and they should not be wiped out by the (lack of)
leadership of this new presidency.
From: Pamela Jones Davidson
To: Ajit Pai
Subject: WE WANT NET NEUTRALITY, AND STEPHEN COLBERT
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 10:53:39 AM
My, you are truly awful. For one so young and so appealing, you have a devious motivation, probably
from your Verizon yoke.
WE THE CONSUMERS WANT AND DEMAND NET NEUTRALITY, not yours to prefer a tiny group of
investors and company which would, under your misguided and evil idea, occupy the fast lane. THAT
SHOULD BE OURS, THE PUBLIC, AND WE WANT IT, AS WE HAVE HAD IT. WHY TAKE IT AWAY FROM
US??? OTHER THAN GREED AND CORRUPTION PERHAPS?!!
We also love, adore and watch the marvelous, witty, truthful Stephen Colbert, aren’t you the
complete jackass to even suggest the FCC muzzle him? THE FIRST AMENDMENT ALLOWS RUMP AND
HIS TEAM, HIS PRESS SECRETARY TO LIE AND LIE AND LIE so it should easily accommodate a
comedian’s words and material.
Thankful to John Oliver for prompting this email. Glad you’ve been inundated, you should be. But oh,
that would be government agencies who care about PEOPLE, CITIZENS, TAXPAYERS, instead of a
corrupt, conniving, profiteering crazy man and his incompetent, corrupt team and family.
As my Mom always said, “in a small town, all you have is your reputation.” Glad industry will rehire
you for as a public figure, you have shown your partisan, corrupt, evil, misguided hand. I feel so bad
for your parents, for The Man in the Mirror always wins out . . . even beyond a cashbox.
Pamela Jones Davidson, JD
Davidson Gift Design
3940 W. Walcott Lane
Bloomington, IN 47404-9339
(812) 876-8646
From: [email protected]
To: Jason Broussard
Subject: Re: Your claim of a DDoS attack
Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2017 5:59:39 AM
Thank you for your note and it would be best if you contact the Office of Media Relations.
As a citizen concerned about net neutrality, I am very skeptical of your recent claim of a DDoS attack on your site at
the exact same time that John Oliver recommended that those of us that stand behind the idea of a free internet voice
our opinions, as we have a right to do.
Therefore, I requesting that you release your logs to an independent security analyst so that we the people may
know the truth about what actually happened.
I will be anxiously awaiting to hear back from you on this very serious matter which, as you are no doubt aware,
plays an important role in our democracy.
Sincerely
Hey Ajit, Does this have anything to do with you? I'm not a lawyer, but I think this is a felony. I've sent
this to my Senators, John Oliver and other federal agencies (not the FCC) with everything else.
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