Something to consider, might make your weekend a little better.
Netflix makes up about 70% of the world's internet traffic. 8k video is coming, which is like 20x the size of a 4k stream. And demand is increasing, there's more providers, video chat usage has increased 5x since January, etc.
Arguably, everyone on the Internet benefitted from the FCC decision to can Net Neutrality. It meant providers could throttle traffic and gave them leverage to get Netflix to limit stream sizes during lockdowns. Without that, it probably would have been impossible for a sudden surge of teleworkers to do anything productive, markets would have crashed a lot harder than they did.
Throttling was a very unpopular idea. When Net Neutrality was being debated, the FCC was subject to bomb threats, constant accusations from activists, sustained social media campaigns claiming every website was about to become pay-per-view, lots of claims that throttling was racist / white supremacist / sexist, etc. It had me very upset at the time, trying to sort through what people were saying to get to the facts. Had petitions on all my sites encouraging people to fight it. Watched the livestream when it was passed and felt very, very bad for a while.
In retrospect, throttling was a very good idea. Policy recognized the reality of the Internet and where it's going, it gave providers a way to align with that path. Always wondered who benefitted from that sustained level of activism, the actions didn't seem to be connected to the facts. Time has proved it was political theater, looking back I wish I spent my time more productively.
There are people who want you to be really upset about the EO and Section 230. If this doesn't go their way, they stand to lose Trillions and a substantial amount of influence. They represent economic interests which are very much empowered via the panopticonic nature of today's worldwide Internet surveillance infrastructure. Mastercard, for example, would not be what it is without data-driven insights into the behavior of massive numbers of consumers worldwide. And they would never be able to get that data without cooperation from Facebook, Google and Twitter.
Say what you want about the President, he's not part of that club. The people around him are not stupid and have demonstrated quite a bit of foresight in their actions. Moreover, they are not going to be bullied by a Big Tech cartel. Previous actions from the administration have worked to the benefit of regular Internet users and certainly did not screw smaller sites. Kiwi Farms loads just fine for me even though everyone one of my neighbors is watching Netflix.
You get 24 hours a day and can spend them however you choose. If you want to be worried about the financial interests of a bunch of kleptocrats in Silicon Valley, go ahead. But you might want to think about who benefits from your outrage. It's not Null.