Net Neutrality

 

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Simple actions that have a large impact:

 

Tell your Congressman to support the Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2008! 

 

Encourage the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to protect the principle of Net Neutrality. 

 

What is Net Neutrality?

Colorado Common Cause firmly believes in Net Neutrality -- the  principle that Internet users should be able to access any web content they want, post their own content, and use any applications they choose, without restrictions or limitations imposed by their Internet service providers (ISPs).

 

Net neutrality is the reason this democratic medium has grown exponentially, fueled innovation and altered how we communicate.  We must make certain that for-profit interests do not destroy the democratic culture of the web.

 

2006 saw some significant strides in our fight to preserve Internet freedom, a.k.a. net neutrality.  In Congress we stopped a flawed telecom reform bill  from becoming law, and at the FCC we won a major net neutrality concession from AT&T as part of its merger agreement with BellSouth.

 

Telecommunications companies aren't going to give up that easily, however.  They want to change the great freewheeling information superhighway that you've grown to love into a privatized, tightly-controlled medium. 

 

Recently, Internet giant Comcast has been summoned to the FCC after multiple accusations of tampering with customer connections when they use file sharing programs online.

 

We're ready - with your help - to fight the telcom giants in the halls of Congress, at state houses around the country and at the FCC.  We need to push back hard at the telecom lobbyists who want to write Internet freedom out of the law.

 

We need your help!  Tell your Congressman to support the Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2008! This bill protects Net Neutrality and opens a public discussion about what Internet policy should be.  So far, the telecommunication companies have been able to weigh in too heavily on what our public interest is.

 

Right now, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is asking for public opinion on net neutrality.  Tell the FCC that the principle of net neutrality needs to be protected so that Internet service providers can't act as gatekeepers.  

 

Some Straight Talk about Net Neturality: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions

 

Articles:

 

Rights Like Free Speech Don't Always Extend Online

 

NEW YORK - Rant all you want in a public park. A police officer generally won't eject you for your remarks alone, however unpopular or provocative.

Say it on the Internet, and you'll find that free speech and other constitutional rights are anything but guaranteed.

 

Guarantee Net Neutrality (editorial)

The information superhighway that is the internet has been an equal opportunity route. A local shop's web page isn't shunted into the slow lane while Mega Corporation's blows by in the express. Each is entitled to use the same path at the same speed.

 

Comcast Mulling Net Usage to Discourage 'Excessive' Use

Comcast is considering setting an official limit on the amount of data that subscribers can download per month and charging a fee for those who go over.

 

10 Ways the Internet (As We Know It) Will Die

5 Ways to Test If Your ISP Throttles P2P

The Digital Freedom Campaign Responds to MPAA Boss Glickman's Remarks on Net Neutrality

Does Big Media's One-Two Punch Knock-out the Internet?

OK Go to Congress: OK Act

 

A tough pill to swallow

Net Neutrality: Return us to a productive landscape