What is Net Neutrality?


Net neutrality is the basic principle that protects our free speech on the Internet. Right now, the FCC is planning to dismantle Title II net neutrality protections that prevent companies like Comcast, Verizon, and AT&T from controlling what Internet users can see by throttling, blocking, and censoring sites and apps, or charging special fees that get passed along to consumers. Big Cable companies are pouring a ton of money into lobbying, misleading ads, and astroturf campaigns in an attempt to confuse the public. If they succeed, the Internet will never be the same.

Why is Net Neutrality Important?


Without net neutrality, Internet Service Providers will be able to charge you for web packages the same way cable companies package television shows. For example, you might be charged an "entertainment and other" package for sites like Reddit, Imgur, and Youtube. So on top of things like Netflix premium and youtube red, you'll have to pay for access to those sites also. Not to mention that the costs of those things will increase. Companies will be charged for high speed access. Netflix would have to increase the cost of it's service just so that it can afford to send you the data. This is bad for everyone, except for the ISPs.

Small Businesses


Insert Joe Shmoe. Joe is starting a new company that aims to provide cool new image hosting technology through his revolutionary front page algorithm. Joe starts picking up some traction but hasn’t figured out a solid way to make a lot of money from his website yet. The ISPs start knocking, demanding a premium for high-speed service to certain customers. Customers have to pay extra for Joe’s hip new website. Now, instead of creating a successful image startup, Joe is priced out of business by the ISPs because:

  • He can’t afford to pay the ISPs

  • Customers decide to pick the Netflix-Youtube package over his Image hosting package

  • Customers who don’t buy the high speed images package doesn’t have fast enough access to see his images faster than dial-up

And now Joe Shmoe’s company dies. If we deregulate, nobody has fast access to Joe’s website. Joe has to pay a premium for the same speed that everyone else was getting.

Legislation


Funny, it seems that the ISPs are the ones that were lobbying for this reversal. The Verge has a list of 265 congress members who sold out to ISPs.

PERHAPS YOU THINK THE INTERNET'S BEING DRAMATIC?


If you think I’m being dramatic or the internet as a whole is overreacting, let me remind you that some of these things have already occurred. Today, Time Warner Cable is being sued by New York for interfering with League of Legends and Netflix bandwidth. Right now, what they did is considered Fraud. They provided a service that was significantly slower than what the customer was paying for. Riot Games provided packet data for this which can be read here. Time Warner was also pressuring Riot for some extra money to ensure the packets arrive and for work on their infrastructure.

You can find a brief list of these Net Neutrality violations here. Educate yourself because Information is power.

So what can you do to help?


  • Email and Call your elected legislators (U.S. Only)

  • Send a comment "Stating that you specifically support strong Net Neutrality backed by Title 2 oversight of ISP's." (U.S. Only) 4 steps to writing an impactful net neutrality comment

  • For a fun piece of info, http://gofccyourself.com leads directly to the FCC page for reporting a comment to their website. (U.S. Only)

  • Spread awareness: Like to bump threads? Next time you bump the positivity thread, why not do it with Battle for the Net's Video Bumper.. Do you ever visit other sites on the internet besides Steamgifts? I don't, but maybe you do :D Spread the word across the internet far and wide. The only way we win this is by resisting. (Everyone)

  • Help support the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and their efforts.

    • What is EFF?
      The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) defends civil liberties in a digital world. See More...

    • How Humble Bundle users can help EFF?
      If Net Neutrality is important to you and believe digital communications should be free from censorship, surveillance and corruption, then log into the Humble Bundle store and select EFF as your supported charity.

    • Support EFF on AmazonSmile
      While this does not make a big impact to donate to EFF - or any other charitable cause since Amazon only donates 0.5% of the purchase price (e.g. you would have to spend $100 for a $0.50 donation, $1,000 for $5 donation, $10,000 for a $50 donation, ad nauseam), it doesn't hurt to give to charity when buying off Amazon. Just log into AmazonSmile and click on Change Your Charity located under Your Account, then type Electronic Frontier Foundation Inc in the Search field and click Select when found.

  • EFF's easy way to comment to the FCC here

What will happen on July 12th?


Websites, Internet users, and online communities will come together to sound the alarm about the FCC’s attack on net neutrality. This is the ultimate goal. To spread awareness and to inform people that the internet as we know it is under attack. This isn't the first time we've had a "day of action" set before. There was The Internet Slowdown Day and The Internet Blackout Day and even if we win the fight this time around, we can probably expect more "days of action" in the future. We need to participate in every one.

Companies participating include Amazon, Kickstarter, Etsy, Reddit, Netflix, Mozilla, Vimeo, Y Combinator, GitHub, Private Internet Access, Pantheon, Bittorrent Inc., Shapeways, Nextdoor, Patreon, Dreamhost, and CREDO Mobile, Goldenfrog, Fark, Chess.com, Imgur, Namecheap, DuckDuckGo, Checkout.com, Sonic, Brave, Ting, ProtonMail, O’Reilly Media, Discourse, and Union Square Ventures. Organizations participating include Fight for the Future, Free Press Action Fund, Demand Progress, Center for Media Justice, EFF, Internet Association, Internet Archive, World Wide Web Foundation, Creative Commons, National Hispanic Media Coalition, Greenpeace, Common Cause, ACLU, Rock the Vote, American Library Association, Daily Kos, OpenMedia, The Nation, PCCC, MoveOn, OFA, Public Knowledge, OTI, Color of Change, MoveOn, Internet Creators Guild, and many others. GOOGLE AND FACEBOOK HAVE JOINED THE FIGHT! :D

UPDATE TO WHAT WE ACCOMPLISHED ON JULY 12TH




Historic day of action for Net Neutrality breaks records:

  • Tens of millions of people saw the protest messages on participating websites

  • Over 5 million emails to Congress (which will be delivered over coming days)

  • More than 2 million comments to the FCC

  • 124,000 phone calls to Congress

  • #NetNeutrality trended on both Facebook and Twitter

  • Protesters went in person to more than 20 Congressional offices

  • More than 125,000 websites, people, artists, online creators, and organizations signed up to participate in the initial call to protest

  • Celebrities flocked to support the effort including Pearl Jam, Wilco, Wil Wheaton, Tim Robbins, Susan Sarandon, Blues Traveler, Steven Fry, Mark Ruffalo, Laura Jane Grace, Kendrick Sampson, Amanda Palmer, Ted Leo, Samantha Bee, and many more.

  • Broad participation from every corner of the Internet: from online gaming communities to librarians to real estate sites to grassroots organizations to independent musicians. See a gallery here.

  • NOTE: The volume of participation was so high that the FCC has been “rate limiting” submissions into their docket – there are an enormous number of comments queued up that will be submitted into their system before the July 17 deadline, as fast as their system can handle them. The same is true for emails to Congress members, which will be delivered in the days to come.

  • Facebook, Google, and Dropbox three of the largest Internet companies, came out publicly with strong statements in support of the current FCC rules. This is significant – especially given Facebook’s previous opposition to certain net neutrality rules, notably in India.

  • Battle for the Net Video Comments

You can read the full update here!

See what some of the companies did to support NN!




Helpful Videos


John Oliver's Video: Net Neutrality 2 - Last Week Tonight Part one here

A 3 minute Net Neutrality "TL;DR" video

Why we need Net Neutrality

Total Biscuit's Video: What is Net Neutrality? and he's made a second one :D

Net Neutrality in the US: 2017 Update -Vihart

Extra Reading


Here are some excellent articles for additional depth. They cover the issue, its political history, the struggles we've overcome, and the fight ahead in Congress and at the FCC.

Comcast May Have Found a Major Net Neutrality Loophole Wired

Verizon's mobile video won't count against data caps—but Netflix does Ars Technica

HOW WE WON Battle for the net

The FCC's Net Neutrality Order Protects Internet Freedom by Restoring the Law Medium

Title II hasn’t hurt network investment, according to the ISPs themselves

Broadband speeds have soared under net neutrality rules, cable lobby says

If you have any more information or useful websites or videos, please comment and I will review and add them to the post.

Edit: If you believe this doesn't impact you because you don't live in the U.S. and therefore don't care about the situation, let me remind you Valve's headquarters are located here in the states. Which means that if you use Steam as a gaming platform, which I'm assuming we all do here at SG, then yes this does impact you. Get angry. Get motivated. Help us fight this.

View attached image.
View attached image.
View attached image.
7 years ago*

Comment has been collapsed.

Don't tell me what to do, or how to feel. Seriously. Especially in caps lock.

Net Neutrality is a big deal for nerds like us. The proposed changes will likely majorly affect a lot of people. But don't yell your opinions at me >:(

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

I apologize....AND HAPPY CAKE DAY!!!!!

Funniest person on the internet since the 90's

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Oh snap, thanks buddy. Didn't even realize it was my cake day yesterday. For future reference, how do I check that?

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Thanks for the giveaways and for the attention to the current Net Neutrality issues. Posted my comments with EFF.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Bump!!

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Beump

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

And my bump!

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Deleted

This comment was deleted 6 months ago.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Please stop trying to break the matrix. I took the blue pill for a reason :/.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Deleted

This comment was deleted 6 months ago.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

I signed petitions for this a year or two ago, thinking we beat this already... but gov't will just think up new ways to try to sneak things through if one fails... What ever happened to The Constitution in general... or Democracy? Plutocrats are no fun, or Oligarchies.

Like many challenges in life, we've got to fight these big entities as much as possible I guess, and never give up.

Sorry to do this, but I'm calling this one FAKE NEWS!

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Keep fighting. Stay strong and never waver as we go into battle! :D

View attached image.
7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

I'm ready to go. Always hope! We got this!

Think they'll finish this before it actually happens for real?

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Deleted

This comment was deleted 5 years ago.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Bump!

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Bump.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Just got an email from FFTF, apparently Facebook and Google are joining the protest.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

I didn't know this! That's freaking awesome. Adding it to the op

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

As at least one person above has stated by now surely I, too, have been signing petitions, sharing emails, and trying to spread the word as well. Keep up the good fight!

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

We will win with such ferociousness!

I'm going to picket outside my Rep's office tomorrow. He sent me an email - let me quote it ->

"The ensuing regulations negatively altered the environment that allowed the internet to flourish and drive the rapid economic growth of the 1990’s and 2000’s.

Which is complete bullshit. I'm gonna even make a sign tonight...and color it.

View attached image.
7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

I'm putting a nice cloudflare banner on all my sites on July 12th.

Not like it'll contribtue much, but still a small bit :3.

View attached image.
7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

That's awesome! Every little helps. The more people are aware of the circumstances impacting them the better off we will all be. Good on you!

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Wasn't there a Net Neutrality vote some time back?

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Yes and you can read about it here. It's truly inspiring when the internet comes together for a cause. Makes me wanna cry a little bit.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

I know that the previous vote was won for NN. But why is there a new one, because there is a new chairman at the FCC?

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Right. Ajit Pai, a former lawyer to Verizon, was elected to head the FCC back in January. He, being a puppet for the ISP's, wants to take away Title 2 NN regulations. He wants "Light touch" regulations, in his own words, that wouldn't protect us from the examples listed here.

It's literally crazy what's happening right now. Like, this is something you would watch in a movie. House of Cards season 6 stuff.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Good luck tomorrow. This vote is kind of going under peoples radar vs the previous one.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Deleted

This comment was deleted 1 year ago.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Right, that's what "Net Neutrality" is. It's more internet regulation. More=better and the U.S. government wants to strike down this so that there is no internet regulation.

Now, this is separate from people doing illegal things on the web, dark web stuff and such, that is monitored by the authorities. What were talking about here is preventing the ISP's to have complete control over the data being sent out and doing shady things like throttling.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Deleted

This comment was deleted 1 year ago.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Bump!

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

No offense, but over here we don't really care for your silly American laws.
You guys still have data caps, that's like early 2000s technology.

But uh, good luck with your thing.
Your companies seem to be pretty corrupt if they would do those things you described, over here the good ones would just step up and offer everything for a low cost and the bad eggs would go bankrupt in days.

7 years ago*
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

The rest of the world will probably notice the net neutrality stuff in America too. When they talk about capping data they mean download and upload. Websites after all use internet providers to get the info on their servers to the people. Without net-neutrality it would be perfectly legal for a provider to slow down (or almost halt) upload-speeds from a server to the people. No matter who on earth is on the receiving end. This means that providers have the power to actively sensor/influence not just what Americans get to see or don't get to see, but what all people don't get to see (as long as the servers sending data to your device are on American soil providers there can cap the upload-speeds of those servers).

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Your companies seem to be pretty corrupt if they would do those things you described, over here the good ones would just step up and offer everything for a low cost and the bad eggs would go bankrupt in days.

See, that's why we need help spreading the word. The grass is literally greener on the other side when it comes to how the internet is handled here in the U.S..

Let me put it this way: A company exists to make a profit. If "Net Neutrality" is taken away and companies have no regulation on how they treat internet data then other companies around the world are bound to take notice of this. Especially if it is more profitable, which it is. They might even try to mimic what they see U.S. companies doing, because they have essentially bought out our government.

So, let's say a company over in the EU see's how effective and efficient buying out a government is and tries to copy it in your country. You get upset because it is totally bullshit and you post in every forum you can to try to spread awareness of this, because you don't want this to happen. You want people motivated and pissed to bring about change.

Now, here I come and I say, "No offense, but over here we don't really care for your silly European laws.
You guys still have data caps, that's like early 2000s technology.

But uh, good luck with your thing."

You'd be pretty infuriated, right?

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Bump

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Bumpy

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

bump for you ^^ but not to enter the GA :D

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

BUMP for visibility!

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

bump, cause this is importart

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

I don't know why people in the USA are not making noise about this. It will affect the whole word and pretty much everyone relies now on what a single country will decide. Although I haven't been informed, the only things I know I know from some forums, maybe not te best way to get news.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Bump.

7 years ago
Permalink

Comment has been collapsed.

Closed 6 years ago by Fyantastic.