Screenshot by Morgan Little/CNET

If you visited Reddit, Tumblr or any number of other sites today, you probably noticed a call to action to save net neutrality. The Red Alerts, part of a campaign to salvage the policy, have been spread across the web and ask individuals to contact their senators ahead of an expected vote on net neutrality.

Reddit is the center of a number of pro-net neutrality protests, with individual subreddits hosting their own variations of the Red Alert event. r/Politics, for example, will be home to an AMA with Sen. Ed Markey, a Democrat from Massachusetts, at 2:30 p.m. ET (11:30 a.m. PT) Wednesday. You can follow along with the AMA here, and as expected, the questions have been highly critical of the FCC's vote to repeal net neutrality.

And any moderators late to the net neutrality action can learn how to set their sub on Red Alert here.

Foursquare, in partnership with Shutterstock, Tinder, Vimeo and Warby Parker, is targeting individuals in Alaska, Colorado, Florida, Louisiana and Nevada. Those five states are home to senators vital to the Senate's net neutrality vote. Foursquare claims that by the time the Senate votes on the resurrection of the net neutrality policies, 26 million people will have been reached by ads like this.

Foursquare

Tumblr, warning "it may be our last chance" to save net neutrality had this Red Alert post Wednesday.

🚨 This is a Red Alert for #NetNeutrality. We only need one more vote in the Senate to save free and open internet as we know it. Learn more here: https://t.co/LUNA5STTWV @battleforthenet pic.twitter.com/fiVrSbuzAK — Tumblr (@tumblr) May 9, 2018

And Netflix has previously shown its support for net neutrality, particularly as it faces the potential for internet service providers to slow down its service in favor of its rivals, as has the ACLU.

Keep fighting for a free & open internet #netneutrality https://t.co/B63FcJfMQP — Netflix US (@netflix) May 8, 2018

Q: What’s the internet without #NetNeutrality?

A: A hot sauce eating competition where only some people get a glass of milk. pic.twitter.com/m6Y7DiAufX — ACLU (@ACLU) May 9, 2018

Even Tim Berners-Lee, credited as the man who brought into being the World Wide Web and the first internet browser, tweeted his continued support for net neutrality policies.

I invented the web as an open, permissionless space #foreveryone. The FCC’s repeal of #NetNeutrality threatens to take that away. Tell the Senate they must protect net neutrality to keep the web open: https://t.co/B73BzfwMi0 #RedAlert cc @lisamurkowski @SenJohnKennedy @JeffFlake — Tim Berners-Lee (@timberners_lee) May 9, 2018

Senate Democrats took to Twitter as well, trumpeting their efforts to bring net neutrality to the floor (complete with a Red Alert icon).

STARTING SOON: We're forcing a vote to save #netneutrality. The countdown clock starts now.



Watch: https://t.co/VDfpM5YReR pic.twitter.com/4lRcllpXka — Senate Democrats (@SenateDems) May 9, 2018

Today, @SenateDems are officially filing the petition that allows us to force a vote on the Senate floor to save #NetNeutrality. We need #OneMoreVote from a Senator, so ask yours: Whose side are you on? https://t.co/yEsMKAUO6q — Chuck Schumer (@SenSchumer) May 9, 2018

The Red Alert campaign itself is part of the Battle for the Net initiative, led by the digital advocacy nonprofit Fight for the Future. The group is rallying support for a day of (real world) net neutrality protests occurring Monday, May 14.

But those efforts aren't going unopposed. Even though the Office of Management and Budget has yet to officially sign off on the specific clauses of the net neutrality repeal, Federal Communications Commission chairman Ajit Pai and the White House have shown little indication of backing down. Under the current net neutrality repeal, the FCC would hand responsibility to the Federal Trade Commission, and ISPs would be given a relatively free window with which to make decisions about Internet service provider AT&T may even ask the Supreme Court to prevent the Federal Trade Commission from policing net neutrality at all.

Other proponents are trying to keep it alive. The Senate passed the Congressional Review Act, a way to overrule the agency. (Find out how every senator voted here.) But it faces an uphill battle, with the CRA still needing approval from the House and President Trump.

Looking even further back, it's not like this is the first time prominent sites and advocacy groups have partnered to bring attention to net neutrality, with little legislative success so far.

And yes, since you were obviously going to ask, consistent net neutrality supporter PornHub is part of the Red Alert campaign too. But we'll let you confirm that on your own time.

Screenshot by Morgan Little/CNET

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