Nebraska Proposes to Re-Instate Net Neutrality

Authored by inverse.com and submitted by mvea
image for Nebraska Proposes to Re-Instate Net Neutrality

The revolution will not be televised. It'll be sent to your inbox by us.

Nebraska Introduces Law to Re-Instate Net Neutrality Statehouses across the country: the next battlefield for a free internet?

A state legislator, Adam Morfeld, introduced a bill Friday to restore rules net neutrality rules in the state of Nebraska.

The “Internet Neutrality Act” (LB856) would restore the former federal rules and prohibit broadband internet service providers from “limiting or restricting access to web sites, applications, or content.”

As Morfeld told a local newspaper, “For me, this is an economic development and consumer protection bill. The internet drives the economy now and it’s critical people have open and fair access to the internet.”

Meet the Nebraskan senator fighting the repeal of net neutrality.

Morfield said that he’s received widespread support for the bill, across the political spectrum. “I was passionate about it, but I was shocked at the support I received from Republicans, from Democrats and Libertarians,” he said.

Nebraska is not the only state to be using state law to fight the deeply unpopular repeal. In Washington state, lawmakers hope to force broadband companies to disclose accurate information about the price and speed of their services and prevent them from creating “fast lanes” of Internet access for consumers that pay more.

Meanwhile, in California last week, lawmakers introduced a bill that attacks the net neutrality repeal at several different levels: it would treat internet service providers as public utilities, block companies that are not following net neutrality rules from from using utility poles, and prohibit government agencies from contracting with internet service providers that do not follow those rules.

Additionally, 16 state attorney generals have pledged to sue the FCC to stop the repeal, led by New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman.

The state laws being proposed or considered in Nebraska, Washington, and California, meanwhile, are likely to result in another, separate lawsuit, since in the FCC’s new rules, published Jan. 4, the commission specifically tried to preempt actions to enforce net neutrality at a local level.

You've read that, now watch this: "Reddit's Net Neutrality Message"

user_name_unknown on January 8th, 2018 at 00:45 UTC »

Nebraska man here...sorry but Pete Ricketts, our governor, is not likely to let this pass.

GoldenScarab on January 8th, 2018 at 00:41 UTC »

I saw articles on here a month ago saying the federal government was putting legislation in place to block states from tampering with federal net neutrality laws (or lack thereof). That would make this Nebraska law null and void right?

Heffeweizen on January 8th, 2018 at 00:35 UTC »

If anything good has come out of the Trump administration, it is the provocation of states to finally begin exercising states rights on a variety of issues.