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Perhaps the greatest freedom in a democracy is freedom of speech.
Throughout our nation's history, people have died fighting not only for
our right to speak, but for our right to be heard.
The Internet is the greatest communications network ever created
because it allows us to speak for ourselves without first asking
permission from corporate gatekeepers. The Internet's importance as a
forum for speech is the result of the principle called net neutrality,
which prevents the phone and cable companies that provide Internet
service from discriminating against content online or interfering with
the free flow of Internet traffic.
But net neutrality and the open Internet may be in serious trouble.
Julius Genachowski, the chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC), has been holding closed-door meetings with Verizon,
AT&T, Comcast, and Google that could pave the way for a corporate
takeover of the Internet. The big phone and cable companies want to
kill net neutrality so they can control and manipulate the content you
can access on the Internet. Those who can pay will have their websites
sped up; those who can't may have their sites slowed down or even
blocked.
Guess who'll be able to pay that extra cost? The big corporations.
Meanwhile, the small or startup business or the new nonprofit
organization will be pushed to the digital margins.
The FCC, our nation's communications watchdog agency, is currently
trying to modernize its Internet policy framework. Unless it succeeds,
the phone and cable companies will be free to censor us online, block
the websites we want to see, and track the websites we visit without
disclosing their practices. The agency is under immense pressure from
the lobbyists to take control of the Internet away from Internet users
and turn it over to corporations.
The Center for Responsive Politics reports that these companies
spent more than $20 million lobbying the federal government during the
first quarter of 2010 alone. Many of these lobbyists enjoy a direct
line to decision-makers in Congress and at the FCC. Glance at a list of
the top staffers working on telecommunications just a few years ago,
and you'll find name after name now representing industry, unconcerned
about advocating for positions they used to oppose.
The Sunlight Foundation reported that 72 percent of the lobbyists
hired by AT&T, Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Verizon, the National
Cable & Telecommunications Association, and the U.S. Telecom
Association--the leading opponents of net neutrality--have previous
government experience. This figure includes 18 former lawmakers and 48
former Hill staffers who worked for the House and Senate commerce
committees that provide congressional oversight of the FCC.
The FCC has the power to do the right thing. What the American
people want is someone to stand up and fight for them against corporate
corruption--whether from BP, AIG or Comcast. It needs to protect the
Internet from a corporate takeover.
Dear Common Dreams reader, The U.S. is on a fast track to authoritarianism like nothing I've ever seen. Meanwhile, corporate news outlets are utterly capitulating to Trump, twisting their coverage to avoid drawing his ire while lining up to stuff cash in his pockets. That's why I believe that Common Dreams is doing the best and most consequential reporting that we've ever done. Our small but mighty team is a progressive reporting powerhouse, covering the news every day that the corporate media never will. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. And to ignite change for the common good. Now here's the key piece that I want all our readers to understand: None of this would be possible without your financial support. That's not just some fundraising cliche. It's the absolute and literal truth. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. Will you donate now to help power the nonprofit, independent reporting of Common Dreams? Thank you for being a vital member of our community. Together, we can keep independent journalism alive when it’s needed most. - Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Perhaps the greatest freedom in a democracy is freedom of speech.
Throughout our nation's history, people have died fighting not only for
our right to speak, but for our right to be heard.
The Internet is the greatest communications network ever created
because it allows us to speak for ourselves without first asking
permission from corporate gatekeepers. The Internet's importance as a
forum for speech is the result of the principle called net neutrality,
which prevents the phone and cable companies that provide Internet
service from discriminating against content online or interfering with
the free flow of Internet traffic.
But net neutrality and the open Internet may be in serious trouble.
Julius Genachowski, the chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC), has been holding closed-door meetings with Verizon,
AT&T, Comcast, and Google that could pave the way for a corporate
takeover of the Internet. The big phone and cable companies want to
kill net neutrality so they can control and manipulate the content you
can access on the Internet. Those who can pay will have their websites
sped up; those who can't may have their sites slowed down or even
blocked.
Guess who'll be able to pay that extra cost? The big corporations.
Meanwhile, the small or startup business or the new nonprofit
organization will be pushed to the digital margins.
The FCC, our nation's communications watchdog agency, is currently
trying to modernize its Internet policy framework. Unless it succeeds,
the phone and cable companies will be free to censor us online, block
the websites we want to see, and track the websites we visit without
disclosing their practices. The agency is under immense pressure from
the lobbyists to take control of the Internet away from Internet users
and turn it over to corporations.
The Center for Responsive Politics reports that these companies
spent more than $20 million lobbying the federal government during the
first quarter of 2010 alone. Many of these lobbyists enjoy a direct
line to decision-makers in Congress and at the FCC. Glance at a list of
the top staffers working on telecommunications just a few years ago,
and you'll find name after name now representing industry, unconcerned
about advocating for positions they used to oppose.
The Sunlight Foundation reported that 72 percent of the lobbyists
hired by AT&T, Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Verizon, the National
Cable & Telecommunications Association, and the U.S. Telecom
Association--the leading opponents of net neutrality--have previous
government experience. This figure includes 18 former lawmakers and 48
former Hill staffers who worked for the House and Senate commerce
committees that provide congressional oversight of the FCC.
The FCC has the power to do the right thing. What the American
people want is someone to stand up and fight for them against corporate
corruption--whether from BP, AIG or Comcast. It needs to protect the
Internet from a corporate takeover.
Perhaps the greatest freedom in a democracy is freedom of speech.
Throughout our nation's history, people have died fighting not only for
our right to speak, but for our right to be heard.
The Internet is the greatest communications network ever created
because it allows us to speak for ourselves without first asking
permission from corporate gatekeepers. The Internet's importance as a
forum for speech is the result of the principle called net neutrality,
which prevents the phone and cable companies that provide Internet
service from discriminating against content online or interfering with
the free flow of Internet traffic.
But net neutrality and the open Internet may be in serious trouble.
Julius Genachowski, the chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC), has been holding closed-door meetings with Verizon,
AT&T, Comcast, and Google that could pave the way for a corporate
takeover of the Internet. The big phone and cable companies want to
kill net neutrality so they can control and manipulate the content you
can access on the Internet. Those who can pay will have their websites
sped up; those who can't may have their sites slowed down or even
blocked.
Guess who'll be able to pay that extra cost? The big corporations.
Meanwhile, the small or startup business or the new nonprofit
organization will be pushed to the digital margins.
The FCC, our nation's communications watchdog agency, is currently
trying to modernize its Internet policy framework. Unless it succeeds,
the phone and cable companies will be free to censor us online, block
the websites we want to see, and track the websites we visit without
disclosing their practices. The agency is under immense pressure from
the lobbyists to take control of the Internet away from Internet users
and turn it over to corporations.
The Center for Responsive Politics reports that these companies
spent more than $20 million lobbying the federal government during the
first quarter of 2010 alone. Many of these lobbyists enjoy a direct
line to decision-makers in Congress and at the FCC. Glance at a list of
the top staffers working on telecommunications just a few years ago,
and you'll find name after name now representing industry, unconcerned
about advocating for positions they used to oppose.
The Sunlight Foundation reported that 72 percent of the lobbyists
hired by AT&T, Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Verizon, the National
Cable & Telecommunications Association, and the U.S. Telecom
Association--the leading opponents of net neutrality--have previous
government experience. This figure includes 18 former lawmakers and 48
former Hill staffers who worked for the House and Senate commerce
committees that provide congressional oversight of the FCC.
The FCC has the power to do the right thing. What the American
people want is someone to stand up and fight for them against corporate
corruption--whether from BP, AIG or Comcast. It needs to protect the
Internet from a corporate takeover.