SAVE THE INTERNET

The battle is on … and the stakes have never been higher.

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On Feb. 26, 2015, the FCC approved strong open Internet rules under Title II of the Communications Act.

This is the biggest victory for the public interest in the agency’s history. And it wouldn’t have happened if not for the millions of people who pushed the FCC to act.

Many of those same people urged the government to block the Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger, which would have enabled Comcast to control the future of the Internet. The FCC and the Justice Department listened — and on April 24, 2015, Comcast abandoned its bid.

The cable and phone companies will continue trying to undermine the open Internet, but our message is clear: Mess with the Internet, and you’ll lose.

Our Goals:

The Internet Is In Danger

Net Neutrality has made the Internet an unrivaled space for free speech, civic participation, innovation and opportunity. Net Neutrality prohibits online discrimination and gives any individual, organization or company the same chance to share their ideas and find an audience.

The Fight’s Not Over

Companies like Comcast and Verizon aren’t used to losing in Washington, and they’ll do everything they can to knock down the Title II protections the FCC approved on Feb. 26, 2015. Our message is clear: Mess with the Internet and you’ll lose.

Mega-Mergers, Mega-Problems

Broadband providers would rather buy out their competition than invest in their networks. But allowing these companies to get even bigger won't help the open Internet — it will only make the gatekeepers more powerful. For the cost of the proposed AT&T-DIRECTV deal and the failed Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger, AT&T and Comcast could collectively deploy super-fast gigabit-fiber broadband service to every single home in America. But the message isn’t getting through: Now Charter wants to buy Time Warner Cable. We need broadband buildout, not corporate buyouts.

What Can We Do About All This?

Millions of people pushed the FCC to protect real Net Neutrality and block the Comcast merger. We need to do everything we can to ensure the open Internet continues to thrive as a space shared and shaped by its millions of users.

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TIMELINE to SAVE THE INTERNET

Jan. 14, 2014:

A federal court strikes down the FCC’s 2010 Open Internet Order.

April 19:

The FCC’s new proposal is leaked — and public interest in Net Neutrality soars.

May 15:

FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler officially proposes his flawed rules. Hundreds of people converge outside the FCC headquarters in Washington, D.C. and rallies break out in cities across the U.S.

July 15:

On the day initial public comments on the FCC’s proposal are due, the agency’s servers crash thanks to the heavy traffic. Within a few short hours Free Press and allies mobilize to hand-deliver hundreds of thousands of comments. The agency makes the unprecedented move of extending its deadline by three days.

July-August:

The SUMMER TO SAVE THE INTERNET: Activists participate in dozens upon dozens of in-district meetings with congressional offices, rally outside fundraisers President Obama attends in the Bay Area and Los Angeles, and file comments in record numbers at the FCC in favor of real Net Neutrality. 

Sept. 10:

The Internet Slowdown. On Sept. 10, hundreds of organizations and online companies — including Netflix, Kickstarter, Etsy and Tumblr — display a spinning icon representing a slow-loading Internet on their websites. This massive day of action drives 2 million emails and nearly 300,000 calls to Congress, and 777,364 people file comments with the FCC.

Sept. 15:

The period for public reply comments closes. A record-breaking 3.7 million people have filed comments — and most support real Net Neutrality. Big rallies are held in New York City and Philadelphia.

Oct. 21
Activists rally in College Station, Texas, and pack a hearing convened by FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai, a Net Neutrality foe. 
Oct. 27

Free Press and allies organize a big speakout in New York City to highlight the voices of the communities the FCC's decision will most impact. 

Oct. 30

The Wall Street Journal reports on new rules under consideration — rules that would still allow slow lanes online. A huge backlash follows in the press and among public interest groups. 

Nov. 10

President Obama releases a video statement urging the FCC to reclassify broadband under Title II.

Dec.

Net Neutrality supporters execute multiple actions in run-up to FCC vote.

Jan. 7, 2015
Chairman Wheeler signals that he will likely base new Net Neutrality rules on Title II. He announces that a vote on these rules will take place on Feb. 26.
Feb. 4, 2015

Chairman Wheeler confirms that his new rules use Title II to give Internet users the strongest protections possible.

Feb. 26, 2015

Victory! The FCC approves Title II-based rules that ban blocking, throttling and paid prioritization online.

May 13, 2015

Free Press files a legal motion to intervene in the industry-backed court case challenging the FCC's Net Neutrality rules.

HOW WE'LL WIN

Pressure the FCC

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Public pressure works: A year of unceasing activism engaging millions of Americans spurred FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler to support Title II reclassification and protect Internet users. Activists across the country also mobilized against the Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger, filing 1 million comments at the FCC. The government listened, and Comcast abandoned its bid.

 

Get Congress on the Record

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Free Press members pushed more than 60 members of Congress to speak out for real Net Neutrality. But now some folks in Congress are promoting a bill designed to prevent the agency from enforcing good rules.

We’ve come so far in this fight and we can’t let these troublemakers ruin everything. Tell Congress to stop this bill in its tracks.

Here's how you can help:

  • Write to Your Member of Congress: Want to send a personal note to your member of Congress? Email us and we’ll send you some samples to work from.
  • Meet With Your Member of Congress: You don't have to go all the way to Washington to weigh in with your elected officials. Check out our step-by-step guide for setting up meetings with your members of Congress in their local offices.
  • Write a Letter to the Editor: One of the most useful ways to get your story to policymakers is to write a letter to the editor of your local paper. Policymakers and their staffs read these letters to get a sense of what their constituents care about. 

Make Noise Outside of D.C.

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To win in Washington you have to organize across the country.

Throughout 2014 and into 2015 we kept up the drumbeat for real Net Neutrality, organizing rallies, protests, people’s hearings and other public events. We also teamed up with our BattlefortheNet.com partners to organize the 24-hour Internet Slowdown. More than 40,000 websites participated in this day of action, which drove more than 2 million emails and nearly 300,000 calls to Congress — and over 700,000 comments to the FCC.

Now that the FCC has passed strong Net Neutrality rules, folks in Congress are trying to undermine this victory. We can’t let them get away with this.

Want to turn up the volume in your community? Here are a few things you can do: 

Expand and Mobilize the Movement

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We mobilized an ever-expanding coalition of groups to advocate for strong Net Neutrality protections. Check out the links below to learn more about how Net Neutrality impacts all of our communities. 

Get the Facts

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Knowledge is power. Learn more about what's at stake.

Overviews: 

Debunking Industry Lies About Net Neutrality:

Get Everyone Talking

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Media coverage of Net Neutrality has skyrocketed. Since January 2014, the Free Press team has had more than 4,000 press hits in outlets including the New York Times, the New Yorker, the Wall Street Journal, NPR, PBS, and the Washington Post. And the fight has made the rounds in pop culture, with celebrities taking up the cause as well. 
 
Here are some of our favorite moments: 
 

 

Join Us

Our rights to connect and communicate — via universally accessible, open, affordable and fast communications networks and devices — are essential to our individual, economic and political freedoms.

The Internet is the foremost battleground for free speech in the 21st century, and protecting our Internet freedom is essential to safeguarding our rights to speak and assemble in private.

Together we’re building the movement we need to protect our rights to connect and communicate.

Take Action Now

 

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People + Policy

= Positive Change for the Public Good

people + policy = Positive Change for the Public Good