Net Neutrality
The Internet’s founding principle is “net neutrality” – the idea that all Internet traffic travels at the same speed. It’s a principle that has paid off big time for consumers, entrepreneurs and America’s economy. But now Big Cable companies want to end net neutrality by dividing the Internet into fast and slow lanes. They want to charge more for content providers – like Netflix – to deliver their content at an acceptable speed.
America's economy suffers when the freedom to compete online is eliminated by monopolist interests. Start-ups who cannot pay the toll for the fast lane won’t be able to leave the garage. And it hurts consumers who will pay more for content and be charged twice for the bandwidth they already paid for.
For 20 years, Senator Wyden has been fighting to preserve a free and open Internet. And now is a key point in that fight. This year, the Federal Communications Commission is considering rules that would end net neutrality and the Internet as we know it. The freedom to compete online is too important for America’s economy and consumers to let that happen.
Read Senator Wyden's op-ed "Hey FCC, do your job and stand up for net neutrality, not big cable schemes"
Watch Senator Wyden's call to action
Latest
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July 18, 2017
Wyden Refutes Pai’s Mischaracterization on Net Neutrality in Comment to FCC
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July 12, 2017
Ron hears Oregonians' support for net neutrality
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July 10, 2017
Wyden, Schatz Urge FCC to Prepare for Deluge of Comments On Net Neutrality Day of Action, July 12
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May 17, 2017
How to File a Comment with the FCC
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June 14, 2016
Wyden Cheers Court Ruling Affirming Strongest Open Internet Rules Ever
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September 21, 2015
Wyden joins Senator Markey, Rep. Eshoo in Amicus Brief Supporting FCC Net Neutrality Rules
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February 26, 2015
Wyden Hails FCC Approval of Rules to ‘Save the Internet’