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originally posted by: Wardaddy454
Big brother = bad.
Therefore, let's rely on big brother to protect the internet.
That's essentially the pro-NN thought process.
originally posted by: Aazadan
originally posted by: Wardaddy454
Big brother = bad.
Therefore, let's rely on big brother to protect the internet.
That's essentially the pro-NN thought process.
That's not it at all. The pro NN idea is that people should be able to get the services they pay for, and that businesses should be free from additional costs. By removing NN we are allowing the ISP's to provide not just connection service, but then to double dip and charge you again for each specific connection.
This could be prevented through competition, but at the ISP level there is no competition in the internet, and it's virtually impossible to create competition due to the billions and possibly trillions in up front spending required. Even megacorps like Google are struggling to add a competing internet service into a handful of selected cities.
There really isn't any good reason to remove existing NN protections.
originally posted by: Wardaddy454
originally posted by: Aazadan
originally posted by: Wardaddy454
Big brother = bad.
Therefore, let's rely on big brother to protect the internet.
That's essentially the pro-NN thought process.
That's not it at all. The pro NN idea is that people should be able to get the services they pay for, and that businesses should be free from additional costs. By removing NN we are allowing the ISP's to provide not just connection service, but then to double dip and charge you again for each specific connection.
This could be prevented through competition, but at the ISP level there is no competition in the internet, and it's virtually impossible to create competition due to the billions and possibly trillions in up front spending required. Even megacorps like Google are struggling to add a competing internet service into a handful of selected cities.
There really isn't any good reason to remove existing NN protections.
My point is about who we would have enforce NN, and how easy it would be to abuse by one side or the other.
As for your point, do we really need more legislation when we could simply enforce anti-trust laws?
originally posted by: TrueBrit
a reply to: Wardaddy454
You are talking absolute nonsense.
Who benefits most from a non-neutral internet? Companies who already offer sub par and over expensive internet connections, poor customer service, and who sell ones data to anyone who wants it, whenever they can get away with it. If you back that, if you want the internet to be just another extension of the corporatist agenda, then you are welcome to have that... FOR YOU ALONE!
You do not have the right to make that choice on behalf of others. I do not want a two tier internet, where traffic from one site is prioritised over traffic from another, purely because one sender has more money and lawyers than another sender. The internet is an equaliser in its current form. Understand, net neutrality is what we have now, and it works. At present traffic from me to you on this site of only a few hundred thousand members, is given the same priority as traffic through Facebook, through Twitter, through any of the big corporations sites. This is how it must remain.
The government, no matter where in the world you are, is not to be trusted implicitly. This is not new information to me. But the answer to that is not to place control over packet speed in the hands of those who want to make the free and equal internet, anything less or different than it is today, purely to drive up their already over inflated profits.
originally posted by: Aazadan
a reply to: Wardaddy454
Removing net neutrality gives the ISP's which are already monopolies, even more power. Specifically, it gives them the power to choose what websites you can visit, and give you packages with your internet. Rather than speed tiers you'll pay for Brietbart+Fox+Drudge+Gab+Myspace vs CNN+MSNBC+Huffington Post+Facebook+Twitter.
And then after you pay for it, you'll still pay for the speed at which you get it.
It will in effect, turn every website in the US to a subscription model.
You will pay three times to visit every single website.
You will pay a subscription fee, which goes to the website, and then to the ISP to make the website accessible to connect to on the providers end.
You will pay a package fee to allow you to connect to the website on the consumer end.
You will pay a speed tier fee that determines how fast that connection you've already paid for on each end, can run at.
originally posted by: Wardaddy454
We've had it already. Has Comcast or any others become better for it?
originally posted by: Aazadan
originally posted by: Wardaddy454
We've had it already. Has Comcast or any others become better for it?
They have actually, because Netflix was able to take them to court over throttling their speeds, something Comcast, Verizon, and the rest would have gotten away with without net neutrality.
originally posted by: Wardaddy454
Yes, and so they turned to data caps.
Apple defends the open internet in a letter to the FCC.
“Broadband providers should not block, throttle, or otherwise discriminate against lawful websites and services. Far from new, this has been a foundational principle of the FCC’s approach to net neutrality for over a decade. Providers of online goods and services need assurance that they will be able to reliably reach their customers without interference from the underlying broadband provider,
Paid fast lanes could replace today’s content-neutral transmission of internet traffic with differential treatment of content based on an online providers’ ability or willingness to pay. The result would be an internet with distorted competition where online providers are driven to reach deals with broadband providers or risk being stuck in the slow lane and losing customers due to lower quality service,