Well since no one who votes can seem to post I guess I'll go.
I'm definitely for Net Neutrality. The Wiki article has gotten a bit long winded with exact explanations so I'll regurgitate based on my understanding. Which in turn should also explain why I'm for it.
By my understanding Net Neutrality is an ideal saying that all data going over the web gets the same priority, and the ISPs must do their best in delivering all IP packets to their destination. Even if the ISP isn't the one you pay for internet access. Sounds Nice...
The recent issues concerning Net Neutrality stem from the desire of ISPs to instead make priority available at a premium. The basic argument of the ISPs is: “The data goes over our network so why can't we charge them for it?”
This would be an extremely bad thing for a couple of reasons:
1. You already pay the ISPs once to get data for you, once to serve up your data if you have a web site. Now the want you to pay them again so they'll at least try to make sure your data gets where it's going?
2. Every ISP will charge to give priority to your data. Let's say for the sake of argument, that Net Neutrality is dead and ISPs are charging priority premiums. I'm a small website owner paying top dollar to Verizon to give my data packets high priority. Good, but I'm only paying Verizon for that high priority. Once my data packets get routed onto say a Comcast network they get lowest priority, insuring that any of my data going over Comcast networks won't make it because it doesn't get priority. Do a tracert of how you get to your favorite websites and see that the data your asking for usually goes through quite a few different networks. You would have to pay each of those networks to be sure your data gets where it needs to go. Remember now there are tons of different ISPs you'll need to pay for priority to make sure everyone can get your data.
3. Let's say all this happens. Net Neutrality goes away and you need to pay twelve different ISPs to get you data just across your home country (this is a low ball estimate). These extra fees prove too expensive for most small websites and the size of the internet is now shrinking to a few dedicated sites and the sites of fortune 500 companies. Where's 4chan.org? It's dead, couldn't pay the priority premiums. Where's addictinggames.com? It's dead, couldn't pay the priority premiums. Where's shibuyabashi forums? It's dead, couldn't pay the priority premiums. This would be the downward spiral of the internet from a great resource of boundless amounts of information, opinions, and mindless chatter to a crappy selection of a few dull company websites where the only thing boundless is their budget. (At this point I would declare the internet dead.)