There it goes:
US weakens net neutrality protections
US weakens net neutrality protections
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If we applied the laws of Net Neutrality to other industries, I believe it becomes painfully obvious that it's incredibly flawed. Let's apply it to shipping.
With Shipping Neutrality, all mail has to take the same amount of time to deliver. Short distance? Long distance? International? It all must take the same amount of time. That's being neutral. Well, what if you want to pay more for overnight delivery? Too bad. What if you want to include shipping in the cost of the item? Too bad, that's favoritism. Amazon Prime is now illegal.
... AND... THAT is the end-game in Net neutrality. If you are following my thoughts here then you will see that China has a HIGH level of "Net Neutrality".
Speak for yourself. I have the choice of Verizon, Verizon, or Verizon.I'd rather manage this issue by voting with my dollars instead of allowing a bunch of clueless bureaucrats assisted by lobbyists take care of it. Too many competition and innovation-killing regulations result that never expire, augmented by endless unintended consequences. It's not like there is only one option in most areas of the US for high speed internet access.
Not so sure.
Consider a situation where in Verizon creates a NetFlix type service. They offer it on there their ISP customers. But it sucks. It costs more then NetFlix and it has only half the content. So, without net neutrality, Verizon simply stops allowing NetFlix on their ISP, or they slow it down so much that you can't really watch anything on it. This is what Net Neutrality is preventing.
Applying the same rules to shipping would be like requiring that all packages of equal size and weight (and travelling the same route) are charged the same for shipping, regardless of what the boxes contain.
This neatly cuts out us as customers from any influence on what is going on.Different Internet content is not the same size and 'weight' (bandwidth burden) on the system; an HD Netflix or Amazon Prime movie vs. a few e-mails for example. And physical package delivery services have long offered varied service tiers; regular mail, 2nd day, overnight, etc... USPS, UPS and FedEx...you walk in with 'content' to deliver to someone, you get a choice of whether to pay more to do it faster.
Netflix walks in the door to Verizon, says it wants to stream large data usage movies to customers, Verizon might likewise say 'Okay, what service level do you want to pay for?'
Richard.
You're conflating two issues here: censorship of content by the government, and net neutrality. They are completely separate.
Different Internet content is not the same size and 'weight' (bandwidth burden) on the system; an HD Netflix or Amazon Prime movie vs. a few e-mails for example. And physical package delivery services have long offered varied service tiers; regular mail, 2nd day, overnight, etc... USPS, UPS and FedEx...you walk in with 'content' to deliver to someone, you get a choice of whether to pay more to do it faster.
Netflix walks in the door to Verizon, says it wants to stream large data usage movies to customers, Verizon might likewise say 'Okay, what service level do you want to pay for?'
Richard.