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Look Guys 30 Senators Are Helping To Overturn The FCC From Taking Net Neutrality Away Find Out To See
Look guys 30 senators are helping to overturn the FCC from taking net neutrality away find out to see if your senator is helping to save net neutrality look right now!

Contact your senators
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More Posts from Hellspawnblr
Lets go guys we have a big chance to get our internet back spread this all over Tumblr and tell people like family friends even neighbor's the people have to know that our internet is getting taken away call your representative and senators and tell them to save net neutrality
SPREAD THIS LIKE WILDFIRE
The “Save Net Neutrality” bill was just introduced to Congress. You know what this means? WE HAVE THE BIGGEST CHANCE TO GET OUR INTERNET BACK.
We can only have a chance if you contact your reps NOW and SUPPORT THE BILL. The Bill has been assigned to the House Energy & Commerce Committee.
Here is the link to the bill: https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/4585
Check these images to see if your GOP MoC or Dem MoC is a member:


Have you heard the news
Please tell me this a joke I heard that Dwayne Johnson is seriously thinking of running for president someone tell me that he is only pulling everyone's leg that he is running for president I can't imagine an actor as our president

Lets help this guy out guys to any other artist you probably been in this guy shoes so lets lend a hand
EMERGENCY COMMISSIONS
Alright, this is not a joke, I shit you not. So I subscribed to a 3 day trail for on a website, and me being an idiot I forgot to cancel it cuz I wasn’t gonna 24 a month for a 3-day for 3 bucks. With that I have no less then $6.00 on my bank account and I need to get back up to what I had. So for that I’m reopening commissions as of now till I get back to the median on my account. Prices are the same with their set prices with the exception of a detailed digital art work being lowered to $15.00. Please help me I at least need a minimum of 20 or 40 to get it back. I will only accept transactions to PayPal since they are connected to my bank account. It’s okay if you don’t have a paypal I’ll understand. Thank you Sketches: $5.00 Digital Vector: $10.00 Vector w/ BG: $20.00 Digital Art: $15.00 Add a character: $2.00
Really now the FCC chairman wants to come after our phones guys look we got to stop this everyone needs to pitch in and help to stop him he is already going after our internet but now our phones no that's where I say he nreds to back off so please help me and others like fighting for net neutrality

The Federal Communications Commission’s decision last week to repeal net neutrality was a major blow to internet freedom, but it’s only the first in a long line of actions that the FCC will take to tell itself that America’s broadband situation is better than it actually is. Up next: redefining high speed wired internet to include cell phone service. Because, according to FCC chair Ajit Pai, that’s totally the same thing.
This idea to reclassify smartphone data as broadband was first proposed in August, but with the net neutrality repeal out of the way, the FCC is expected to vote on the proposal by February 3. Currently, the FCC defines broadband connection as 25Mbps download speeds and 3Mbps upload speeds minimum. The new proposal would keep these minimums in place for fixed wireline broadband but also expand the definition to include cell phone data coverage.
This would not only camouflage many of the communities in the US with no access to the internet, but could prevent them from getting necessary funding to build that access. Cell service is often slower, more expensive, and comes with data caps, and even tethering a computer to a phone for internet isn’t a long-term solution, especially for families with multiple people trying to log on at once to do homework, or work, or watch Netflix.
“It seems antithetical to all the other efforts we’re doing,” said Deb Socia, the executive director of Next Century Cities, a coalition of municipalities aimed at expanding local broadband access. “I spent a good part of my life as a teacher and a principal. If I had a classroom full of children that included a lot of failing students, I wouldn’t change my standards [to increase the number of passing grades,] I’d change the intervention.”
Though the process to change these definitions is not as formal as what was required to roll back net neutrality rules, there was still an opportunity for groups to comment this summer, and if there’s enough public backlash, it could potentially meet a different fate. Like net neutrality, it ultimately just comes down to the FCC to make the decision, but groups like Next Century Cities are hoping to hold the agency’s feet to the fire in the meantime.
In January, the group is launching a campaign called #MobileOnly, challenging people to spend one day in the month using only their cell phone data for internet access—no laptops, no computers, and no Wi-Fi. It’s a challenge that’s so unappealing I refuse to even entertain the idea, but it’s one that millions of Americans will be left with as an only option if these broadband definitions are changed. Socia herself will be doing the challenge, as will the two Democrat commissioners on the FCC, Mignon Clyburn and Jessica Rosenworcel.
“Promoting deployment of mobile broadband services alone is not sufficient to bridge digital divides in underserved rural and urban communities,” Clyburn said in a press release for the campaign. “By standing together through this movement, we will demonstrate why it is so essential for all Americans to have access to a robust fixed broadband connection.”
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story stated that the #MobileOnly challenge was month-long, but participants are asked to pick just one day to take part.