drrich2
Contributor
To define broadband internet as a public utility brings to mind a key difference in how it functions from a cost & usage perspective compared to, say, electricity.
The power company provides us electricity. Those of us who use more, pay more. The electric company (sort of a producer and distributor in one) makes more profit from higher users, which helps fund the infrastructure, and the 'cost per use' model discourages excessive use & strain on the infrastructure.
With broadband internet, the producer (content owner/licenser) and distributor (ISPs) are separate. For historical and practical reasons, the model has shifted heavily to flat fee unlimited access - 'all-you-can-eat buffet internet.' But there's limited bandwidth; this is especially true with cellular signals (not everyone in a city can watch a 4K video on their smart phone via cellular signal at once!), but to a lesser extent with wired providers (i.e. Cable & DSL).
From the ISP's perspective, there's limited infrastructure to provide a service at a flat fee. All is well for awhile. Then they get customer complaints about slow down and bad service. Turns out people are streaming Netflix & other high-def. video providers. It will cost the ISP to build out their system and meet the increased need. But in a few years, will people stream 8K video? The ISP can start to feel like Netflix's 'b**ch,' so to speak, and they want a cut.
With other public utilities, such as electricity or water, the end user pays more for more use. That funds infrastructure. With the internet, 'pay for usage' is politically untenable. If ISP's switched to a 'pay for use' model, there'd be complaints of the 'haves vs. have-nots' (people with more money having an advantage in a free society).
Net neutrality prevents the ISPs from having the leverage to make money off content providers. Whether society has a 'moral right' to do that, what the ISPs would do with that extra profit (e.g.: going to share holders vs. going to infrastructure build-out), what this would do to pricing at low to mid-tier consumer monthly access rates, those things aren't so clear. Because I don't know these answers, net neutrality is a hard issue for me to decide, but as a conservative, I'm not enthused at regulating without clear need.
Richard.
The power company provides us electricity. Those of us who use more, pay more. The electric company (sort of a producer and distributor in one) makes more profit from higher users, which helps fund the infrastructure, and the 'cost per use' model discourages excessive use & strain on the infrastructure.
With broadband internet, the producer (content owner/licenser) and distributor (ISPs) are separate. For historical and practical reasons, the model has shifted heavily to flat fee unlimited access - 'all-you-can-eat buffet internet.' But there's limited bandwidth; this is especially true with cellular signals (not everyone in a city can watch a 4K video on their smart phone via cellular signal at once!), but to a lesser extent with wired providers (i.e. Cable & DSL).
From the ISP's perspective, there's limited infrastructure to provide a service at a flat fee. All is well for awhile. Then they get customer complaints about slow down and bad service. Turns out people are streaming Netflix & other high-def. video providers. It will cost the ISP to build out their system and meet the increased need. But in a few years, will people stream 8K video? The ISP can start to feel like Netflix's 'b**ch,' so to speak, and they want a cut.
With other public utilities, such as electricity or water, the end user pays more for more use. That funds infrastructure. With the internet, 'pay for usage' is politically untenable. If ISP's switched to a 'pay for use' model, there'd be complaints of the 'haves vs. have-nots' (people with more money having an advantage in a free society).
Net neutrality prevents the ISPs from having the leverage to make money off content providers. Whether society has a 'moral right' to do that, what the ISPs would do with that extra profit (e.g.: going to share holders vs. going to infrastructure build-out), what this would do to pricing at low to mid-tier consumer monthly access rates, those things aren't so clear. Because I don't know these answers, net neutrality is a hard issue for me to decide, but as a conservative, I'm not enthused at regulating without clear need.
Richard.