Not getting into the fear mongering hysterics of government controlling pricing, etc...
Uh what hysterics?
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Not getting into the fear mongering hysterics of government controlling pricing, etc...
Uh what hysterics?
AT&T, Comcast, Time-Warner, Sprint, T-Mobile, etc., etc.whoa wait who is doing that?
Non-discrimination laws are on the books to prevent denying goods and services for reasons of race, religion, color, or national origin. If Comcast doesn't want to sell to Netflix there is nothing Netflix can do about it.
And THAT is the heart of the net neutrality argument.
If YOU, the consumer, want Netflix - you can only have it if Comcast decides to allow it.
The hysterics that the government involvement in the internet is going to ruin everything for everyone. Prices will too high and innovation will be stifled. I don't believe that to be true. By ensuring free access to all, there is plenty of room to make profits and be innovative. What stops innovation is having only a couple of options. Competition on a level playing field is better for the consumer.
Because the carrier won't listen to the consumer?....Yes, and? Why should the government force Comcast to carry Netflix?
Because the carrier won't listen to the consumer?....
It's not "the government pandering to individual content providers"; it's the government stepping in on behalf of the consumer to ensure choice.
Let me ask this: where are you getting your information about net neutrality from? Tech people and tech news sources? Or politicians and media figures?The Government NEVER is about ensuring Choice, they are about Telling people what they have to choose, or really limiting options until most people can only make one choice.
Public School
USPS
we can add healthcare to that list now
Having the Government regulating the Internet is the worst thing that could happen to the Internet.
Comcast doesn't have to like Netflix, but they shouldn't be able to stop others from using the service. Much like blocking a road to a store someone wants to shop at, wouldn't be allowed.
Because the carrier won't listen to the consumer?....
It's not "the government pandering to individual content providers"; it's the government stepping in on behalf of the consumer to ensure choice.
If you don't mind the carrier deciding for us what content will be delivered, okay. Dish & DirecTV decide for us all the time what channels we're allowed to watch, every time there's a dispute about whether they're getting paid enough. And the dispute is not about bandwidth; it's about how many viewers are watching that particular channel, and therefore how much more Dish and DirecTV think they're entitled to for allowing viewers to be able to watch that channel.
Actually, the analogy is more along the lines of Comcast built the roads and now wants to charge Netflix, one of the heaviest user of the roads, to use them.
Part of being allowed to build the road was an agreement that everyone could drive on it (frequency auctions). If you're not allowing everyone to travel on it, you are breaking the agreement and something must be done to ensure this doesn't happen again. (Title II)
Okay, folks; I'm gonna have to walk back my position a bit. While I support the basic tenets of actual net neutrality, and the way the current FCC chairman phrased his announcement a couple of weeks ago ... I'm deeply concerned that they're not allowing the public to see the 332 page proposal.
This does not bode well.
No, it doesn't. They are going to vote on it before they release the report to the public. BTW, don't get hung up on the "332 pages" thingie, about 90% of the report are comments from citizens made last year when the FCC asked for input, and not policy statements or rules.