Keep the 2015 Regulations on Net Neutrality. There is no reason to change them. Things are working fine now. Allowing ISPs to throttle, choke, or charge for certain internet access, or otherwise force ads or advertising videos to be watched before access is granted (for which the ISP is charging, of course), is, in essence, giving ISPs the power of censorship based on some profit- or propaganda-based motive, or who knows what kind of other deviant motive with which they could dream up in the future. This is akin to telling Public Libraries that they can charge for access to certain types of books, or books with certain types of content (imagine where THAT would lead!). Freedom of Information is so important that it is actually the name of an ACT of LAW -- yet now the FCC wants to throttle that freedom as it pertains to this relatively "new" platform called the Internet. The government cannot allow Internet Service Providers to sell a user's search engine info, or to carve and craft new mechanisms to benefit themselves or gain a financial advantage over providing access to certain sites, etc. They charge a certain rate (which should be to everyone equally), so are already paid for their conduit service! ISPs are merely CONDUITS! Information merely travels over their systems, it is NOT their information to "sell" or to "censor" or to "restrict" or to "collect" or to "bottleneck" nor for which to "charge varying amounts" to access, like some Troll on a toll bridge, in any way, shape or form! This is what the Government is SUPPOSED to regulate! Unfettered, equal access to the Internet should be a fundamental right, just as is free access to schools (i.e., everyone can learn to read -- there's no "charge" for it or for library access to check out books, nor do libraries "collect" information about where in the book racks you went!). Unfettered, equal access to the Internet is as important as access to such things as the ability to connect electricity, natural gas, and other "utilities" to our homes. Some government regulation is absolutely necessary. Don't unravel or "fix" this regulation (which isn't broken), just because you think that it won't be a problem or that the regulation is unnecessary. We may not be able to imagine, now, the depth of the chaos of what unraveling the 2015 regulations will create, but it is certain to create unfair treatment on its face. KEEP POLITICS out of it, please!