Amazon, Reddit, Mozilla and others set to stage a net neutrality unnecessary protest next month
The Federal
Communications Commission, as you likely know, is actively working to overturn
landmark net neutrality rules passed in 2015 under the Obama administration.
While some have already dismissed the pushback as a lost cause, many technology
giants aren’t prepared to go quietly into the night.
Companies
such as Amazon, Kickstarter, Mozilla, Vimeo and Etsy are joining forces with
the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and hundreds of other organizations
including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Center for Media Justice,
American Library Association, Organizing For Action, Demand Progress, Greenpeace,
MoveOn and others for a “day of action” to defend the open Internet.
Current FCC
Chairman Ajit Pai has vowed to dismantle net neutrality protections and in
April, President Donald Trump signed into law a bill to repeal rules that former FCC
Chairman Tom Wheeler fought to put in place for years.
Corynne
McSherry, legal director for the EFF, referenced earlier online protests like the 24-hour blackout to
protest SOPA in 2012
and the Internet Slowdown Day in 2014 as evidence that the Internet can rise up
and force regulators to listen.
McSherry
noted that details of the July 12 event are pending but said the goal is to
send a strong message to the FCC and Congress: “Don’t Mess with the Internet.”
More
companies and organizations are expected to join the effort in the coming days
and weeks.
Image via Kevin Lamarque, Reuters
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