Title II Fans Launch Net Neutrality 'Detector'

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Only days after the Government Accountability Office suggested the Federal Communications Commission should seek third-party data on broadband speed and performance, a group of network neutrality activists have launched the Internet Health Test, which they call a kind of network neutrality detector.

In reclassifying the FCC under Title II common carrier regulations, the FCC added to bright-line rules a general conduct standard for anything that has the effect of impeding an open Internet. According to backers of the new online health test -- Demand Progress, Fight for the Future and the Free Press Action Fund -- the test is an interactive tool that lets Web surfers "run speed measurements across multiple interconnection points and collect data on whether and where Internet service providers are degrading online speeds and violating Net Neutrality." "After repeatedly watching Internet service providers slow down people’s Internet connections we're not going to just sit back and trust Comcast, Verizon and AT&T to follow the new open Internet rules,” said Fight for the Future campaign manager Charlie Furman. “The Internet Health Test is our way of sending a message to ISPs everywhere that we're watching and we won't let anyone throttle the Internet.”


Title II Fans Launch Net Neutrality 'Detector' The Internet Health Test (Battle for the Net)