Dear colleagues, Apologies in advance for the spam, but as many of you know, several large ISPs and their industry organizations are challenging the FCC's recent net neutrality order in court. Since the outcome of this case could have real consequences for how Internet services work in the future, I'm writing you today to ask you to sign on to a letter that EFF and ACLU have prepared for the court. The letter explains several key engineering concepts that are vital to understanding how the Internet actually operates (e.g. the end-to-end principle, the layered network stack, how IP routing works, etc.). It also stays away from legal arguments, and instead focuses on the technical arguments for how net neutrality has been key to the design and operation of the Internet since its beginning. It also lays out the technical consequences that could occur should the FCC's order be struck down, focusing on how large ISPs could transform the Internet from a system where innovation can take place without permission to one where ISPs get to dictate what protocols and services their customers are allowed to use. /*If you're willing to sign on and help today, please email me directly (off list) */and I will be happy to share a copy of the letter for you to review before you agree to sign on. The more signatures we can get, the more likely the court is to take notice. All it takes is an email. Please help us make sure the court gets the message: from an engineering point of view, neutrality and openness are fundamental to the way the Internet operates today. Thank you for your support, -- | Jeremy Gillula, Ph.D. | Staff Technologist | Electronic Frontier Foundation | (415) 436-9333 x158 | jeremy@eff.org | @the_zeroth_law | GPG Key Fingerprint: | 4DCF A726 7C7D E327 7DD6 | 863E A25B 3CE6 2CAC 7BE9