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Verizon killed Net Neutrality. But the FCC can save it.
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The petition to FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler reads:
"At the behest of Verizon, a federal appellate court struck down
the FCC’s Open Internet Order and internet providers are now free to
discriminate – block or slow down – any web site or application they
choose. As the new FCC Chair you must reclassify broadband Internet
access as a telecommunications service and save Net Neutrality."
Automatically add your name:
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Dear Jim,
Verizon killed Net Neutrality when a federal appeals court ruled in
its favor and struck down the Federal Communications Commission’s Open
Internet Order.1
Net Neutrality is a principle that says that Internet users, not
Internet service providers (ISPs), should be in control. It ensures that
Internet service providers can’t speed up, slow down, or block web
content based on its source, ownership, or destination.
And now Net Neutrality is dead – at least until the FCC stands up to
Verizon and AT&T and passes strong rules that will pass the legal
test for ensuring Americans have access to a free and open Internet.
Tell new FCC Chair Tom Wheeler: Save Net Neutrality. Click here to sign automatically.
The verdict was a disappointment but came as no surprise. Back in
2010, the FCC, led by Obama-appointee Julius Genachowski, voted to adopt
rules that enshrined in federal regulations for the first time the
ability of AT&T, Comcast, Verizon and other ISPs to discriminate
between sources and types of content.
Now even those meager protections have been struck down. But the new
chair of the FCC, Tom Wheeler, can save Net Neutrality by doing what
former FCC chair Genachowski failed to do. He can stand up to Verizon
and AT&T, and undo the Bush-era decision to deregulate broadband
Internet providers and allow them to operate outside of the legal
framework that has traditionally applied to companies that offer two-way
communication services.
Tell
FCC Tom Wheeler: Reclassify broadband as a telecom service, and enact
strong Net Neutrality protections. Click here to sign automatically.
Back in 2010, this latest court decision was utterly predictable. A
federal court had already ruled that unless the FCC reversed the
Bush-era decision to deregulate broadband, the FCC couldn’t enforce Net
Neutrality rules. Then FCC Chair Genachowski tested the waters with a
proposal to reregulate (or in the jargon of the FCC “reclassify”)
broadband. Genachowski himself said that, according to the FCC General
Counsel, pushing ahead with policies without reregulating broadband
would be unwise given the tenuous legal footing the FCC would find
itself in.
But Obama administration’s support for Net Neutrality was so weak
that his FCC declined to reclassify broadband as a prerequisite to
passing Net Neutrality rules. Without providing this legal framework,
the Open Internet Order was never anything more than a cynical ploy by
Democrats to claim a victory on Net Neutrality while actually caving on
real protections for consumers.
New FCC chair Tom Wheeler has a chance to change this. He recently
made a strong statement in support of Net Neutrality and the necessary
legal framework to defend it, saying that “it is essential that the FCC
continue to maintain an open Internet and maintain the legal ability to
intervene promptly and effectively in the event of aggravated
circumstances."
But it’s unclear if he’ll simply kick the can down the road by
appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court (a body that, with the outrageous
Citizens United decision, has already proved itself more loyal to
corporate control than to protecting our democracy). We need him to
muster the political will to take action immediately and save Net
Neutrality by reversing the deregulation of broadband and giving teeth
to the FCC’s ability to enforce Net Neutrality rules and force Internet
service providers to treat all traffic equally.
Tell FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler: Stop the corporate takeover of
the internet and save Net Neutrality. Click the link below to sign the
petition automatically:
http://act.credoaction.com/go/3127?t=8&akid=9854.3371131.f8C3Xx
Becky Bond, Political Director
CREDO Action from Working Assets
Automatically add your name:
- Leticia Miranda, "Verizon, the FCC and What You Need to Know About Net Neutrality," The Nation, December 6, 2013.
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