Found this on Reddit (/neopets and /pcmasterrace) and I'm quite worried about it.

Apparently there's a discussion going on about net neutrality and it's pretty much a repeal from certain rules from 2015 that prevented broadband companies from blocking or slowing down access to websites or services.
If it's approved, all data on the Internet won't be "treated" the same.
There may, or may not, be discrimination, allowing companies to charge differently by user, content, website, platform, etc.

According to CNET:
What is net neutrality again?
Net neutrality is the principle that all traffic on the internet should be treated equally, regardless of whether you're checking Facebook, posting pictures to Instagram or streaming movies from Netflix or Amazon. It also means that companies like AT&T, which is trying to buy Time Warner, or Comcast, which owns NBC Universal, can't favor their own content over a competitor's content.

So what just happened?
Pai, who became FCC chairman after President Trump took office, on Tuesday published a proposal to eliminate the current net neutrality regulations, which prohibit broadband providers from blocking or slowing down traffic and ban them from offering so-called fast lanes to companies willing to pay extra to reach consumers more quickly than competitors.
But the proposal's most significant change is to strip the FCC of its authority to regulate broadband and instead shift that responsibility to the Federal Trade Commission. Under the 2015 rules, the FCC reclassified broadband as a utility, which gave it the authority to regulate broadband infrastructure much as it did the old telephone network. The proposal would strip away that classification.
If you want to read more about it, here's the link to CNET's article: (you need an account to see links).
Post on /pcmasterrace: (you need an account to see links).