In order to maintain an open and competetive internet, it is essential that we preserve Title II regulation of internet service providers in the US. Companies such as Comcast and Verizon have clearly demonstrated both their intention and their ability to constrict access to services that compete with their investments, e.g. Comcast's throttling of Peer-to-Peer services and Verizon's block on Google Wallet. If allowed to do so, American internet service providers and the platforms that they own would cease to innovate, prefering to throttle competitors out of the market rather than compete with them on quality. Amazon today is global giant because it was forced to offer superior services and innovative solutions to adapt or die in a open American market. Alibaba today serves an inferior product, popular only in China, because it was not forced to compete fairly in its native market, but was instead given the same advantage of entrenchment that the FCC seeks to give American ISPs today. As a professional software developer and American, I urge the FCC to maintain Title II classification of internet service providers. -- Christopher Steven Adams