Now that net neutrality is drooping at death's door, we're long overdue for a closer look at Tom Wheeler, who is currently the FCC chairman, before he was a lobbyist for cellphone and cable companies. Here are some things to know:



Does it seems fishy that Obama picked someone who pushed industry deregulation to head the federal agency that regulates said industry? It does, doesn't it. When he was nominated, an insider told Reuters that, "All of the senators in the Commerce Committee know Tom as a lobbyist who funnels funds to them, not as a stand-up guy from a regulatory agency who is able to take heat." But it's probably worth pointing out that Wheeler managed to drum up about $700,000 in campaign contributions to both of Obama's presidential runs.

Rewriting rules regulating net neutrality has been on the FCC's agenda for a while now, and in January, the agency was given an opportunity to address it when a federal appeals court ruled that ISPs could charge online companies more to stream their content faster. Lobbyists for Big Cable and Communication started pushing the FCC to loosen its hand on Internet regulation, and their efforts appear to have worked. This week, the FCC announced it will permit broadband companies to charge sites for premium pipeline service, effectively creating an Internet fast-lane for the fat cat corporations, and leaving smaller sites that can't pay in the dust.

Wheeler has argued this proposed ruling doesn't violate the "Open Internet" laws that have kept the World Wide Web flowing so freely over the past few decades, and that broadband companies would be closely monitored to prevent "harmful conduct." Right!

The man who appointed Wheeler, by the way, once argued that he was a strong supporter of net neutrality. From an Obama campaign speech in 2007: "What you’ve been seeing is some lobbying that says that the servers and the various portals through which you’re getting information over the Internet should be able to be gatekeepers and to charge different rates to different Web sites…. And that I think destroys one of the best things about the Internet—which is that there is this incredible equality there."

Yeah, okay.