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Sunday, January 19, 2014

The end of the Internet as we know it? Federal Communications Commission's Open Internet ("net neutrality") rules struck down



I'm sure you saw the news stories this week. A court on Tuesday gutted a federal telecom policy that guaranteed free speech online. Internet Service Providers are now free to make consumers pay more to access certain sites.

The silver lining is that the Court made clear the Federal Communications Commission can fix this by writing better rules to protect consumers. But they need to hear from us.

The time to act is now. You can still add your name to our petition to restore net neutrality.


Thanks for all you do,

Robert Reich
and the rest of the team at Common Cause



Bad news. The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals just struck down the Federal Communications Commission's Open Internet ("net neutrality") rules that guarantee free speech online.

The upshot of the decision is that Internet Service Providers like Verizon and Comcast now have permission to censor access to the sites and services you rely on every day.

This absolutely cannot stand -- sign our petition today!

This could be the end of the Internet as we know it. Broadband may become like cable television -- with popular sites like Facebook and Netflix in higher-priced tiers.

Fortunately, the FCC can fix this mess -- today. The court's ruling allows the FCC to write strong new rules that will withstand legal challenge and protect Internet users. Join us today in calling on the FCC to get it right this time.

Sign our petition to the FCC today and tell them to protect the Open Internet!Thanks for all you do,

Todd O'Boyle
and the rest of the team at Common Cause
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Common Cause is a national nonpartisan organization with chapters in 35 states. Our mailing address is 1133 19th Street NW, 9th Floor, Washington, DC 20036. Our phone number is (202) 833-1200.

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