YouTube is developing a secret weapon against the internet’s worst commenters.
You know who you are.
YouTube is developing a secret weapon against the internet’s worst commenters.
You know who you are.
Happy Internet Slowdown Day!
Take action to save Net Neutrality: http://bit.ly/1qLsc6U
Comcast is giving free Internet-speed upgrades — but only for certain high-paying customers (i.e. the 1%) …
So what about the rest of us?!
Comcast needs to increase speeds and decrease prices for all of its customers — especially for low-income and working people, who are often stranded on the wrong side of the digital divide.
Sign this petition if you’re sick and tired of being pushed around by Comcast!
Let’s get ready to rumble!
Net Neutral-i-Kitty and Cable Boss have arrived at the FCC.
The cat fight for the future of the Internet is about to begin! Stay-tuned for more.
I believe the FCC must find a way to put open Internet policies back in place … we cannot have a two-tiered Internet with fast lanes that speed the traffic of the privileged and leave the rest of us lagging behind. So as we look for a way forward, I am pleased that Chairman Wheeler has recently acknowledged that all options, including Title II, are on the table.
In one month the FCC will vote on Net Neutrality.
Join the Internet Countdown and show lawmakers the whole Internet is watching and literally counting down the seconds until we get REAL Net Neutrality.
Yesterday’s Internet Slowdown protest was epic!
Read all about here.
Some of our great allies celebrated the Summer of Internet Freedom with a CDT/EFF/CalPIRG Internet Declaration event.
Internet freedom goes hand in hand with mustard, ketchup and beer!
On July, 1 more than 1,200 people from all across the U.S. made a trip to their local congressional offices to deliver a message: Don’t mess with the Internet.
They were responding to a sneak attack on Net Neutrality buried deep inside a 158-page funding bill. That bill has to pass in some form just to keep the government running, so it’s urgent that Congress scrap this language from the bill.
We at the Free Press Action Fund — in partnership with our allies at Demand Progress and the Media Action Grassroots Network (big shout out to Generation Justice!) — organized more than 1,000 people across the country to make visits during this week’s congressional recess.
From Alaska to Arkansas, dedicated Net Neutrality supporters stopped by to drop off materials educating their representatives about this threat. We even heard from folks who showed up to find a closed office, but were undeterred and slid the materials under (or even taped them to) the front door.
What do an environmental group in Ohio, a small military radio program, and a network of rural hospitals in Texas all have in common? They appear on a list of coalition members for a group pressuring the government to abandon net neutrality—rules to prevent broadband providers from creating Internet fast and slow lanes—but claim they did not intend to sign up for any such advocacy.
Read more here.
The only way we’re going to win back Net Neutrality is if FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler finds the courage to do the right thing. And a message from Google’s Larry Page, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg carries a lot of weight in Washington.
