
Steve81
Audioholics Five-0
@herbu
Judging by your posts, like this snippet:
The problem is this:
We use ISPs for access to the internet. Should ISPs then be able to turn around, and using the direct access they have to their subscriber base as leverage, charge third parties for access to those subscribers under pain of face throttling or potentially even blocking content?
What are the implications that has for other businesses, many of which operate in part if not in whole over the internet?
Is that what we as customers have signed up for? For ISPs to act as our gatekeepers by using our business as leverage against other companies?
What stops ISPs (many of which also function as cable companies) from throttling competitors like Netflix and Hulu to the point of being unusable, and how does that conflict with anti-competition laws?
Judging by your posts, like this snippet:
I don't think you're on the same page with the rest of us. That's not what Net Neutrality is about.Should you charge everyone, light and heavy users, the same thing? Does the guy who streams Netflix or plays online games pay the same as the guy who looks at a forum a couple times a week? If everybody only used 1GPS, would you still need to expand? Maybe 1GPS is plenty for one person, another wants 5GPS and another wants 100GPS. Should a law require that they all pay the same thing? I don't think so.
The problem is this:
We use ISPs for access to the internet. Should ISPs then be able to turn around, and using the direct access they have to their subscriber base as leverage, charge third parties for access to those subscribers under pain of face throttling or potentially even blocking content?
What are the implications that has for other businesses, many of which operate in part if not in whole over the internet?
Is that what we as customers have signed up for? For ISPs to act as our gatekeepers by using our business as leverage against other companies?
What stops ISPs (many of which also function as cable companies) from throttling competitors like Netflix and Hulu to the point of being unusable, and how does that conflict with anti-competition laws?