I strongly urge that the FCC do not move forward with dismantling Net Neutrality. Without Net Neutrality, it would be legal for service providers (in this case, 3rd parties) to arbitrarily slow down any connection between two peers. In many cases, one of these peers is a paid-for service in use by the other peer, a client. It is simply anti-consumer and economically unfair to both the paid-for service and their client to experience inferior network connectivity simply due to the whims of their service provider. It is the duty of the service provider to provide the best connections possible for all their users. This duty would remain enforceable under Net Neutrality law. Another concern is that many service providers are direct competitors in markets which rely on network connections--markets which could be legally fixed if Net Neutrality were to be dismantled. In the current state of the United States economy, companies (especially monolithic entities such as service providers) cannot be trusted to NOT take advantage of every power they have over their competition. In a world without Net Neutrality, nothing is stopping bundled cable and Internet service providers from degrading connections to and from their competitors' on-line services.