12/21/2010 1:57:33 PM
I would think that if ISP's could begin to selectively limit traffic to certain sites based on how it impacts their business it could be a very bad thing.
12/21/2010 2:18:34 PM
tww is doomed
12/21/2010 2:20:09 PM
^^ they've already done that in some cases
12/21/2010 2:21:48 PM
I once found out my mother was against it, because she heard that it would allow the government to limit speech on the Internet. I and corrected her. I don't know if she believed me (she typically takes Fox News to be gospel).
12/21/2010 2:25:38 PM
It does allow the FCC to regulate how ISP's operate, though, which is a form of power in and of itself. It's basically un-privatizing bandwith access to the internet. If I'm interpreting this correctly.[Edited on December 21, 2010 at 2:46 PM. Reason : asdlfasjkd]
12/21/2010 2:45:26 PM
12/21/2010 3:02:29 PM
I believe it stops them. Or is supposed to.
12/21/2010 3:15:51 PM
If I understand it correctly, Net Neutrality allows the FCC to regulate ISPs so that they cannot regulate bandwidth. So it is regulating to keep from regulating, if that makes sense.
12/21/2010 3:18:18 PM
the problem is that i understand and agree with the most fundamental complaint of ISPs: users (or companies) that use the most bandwidth pay the same as those who use far lessin theory, i agree that you should pay based on your usagein reality, i don't want that to happen because 1.) i'm selfish, and 2.) ISPs are far from altruistic and it is a slippery slope
12/21/2010 3:39:11 PM
What it really means is no more free internet porn.
12/21/2010 3:43:21 PM
That is exactly the opposite of what it means
12/21/2010 3:44:24 PM
It has more to do with delivery speed of content of sites, not the usage of the individual web user.The elimination of Net Neutrality that is..[Edited on December 21, 2010 at 3:45 PM. Reason : ...]
12/21/2010 3:44:55 PM
This doesn't have anything to do with paying for your bandwidth usage. This is about TWC charging you more per megabyte transferred watching Netflix (or using packet shaping or whatever to prevent you from doing so) than for other services because they own a cable company and would rather you watch your shows on cable.
12/21/2010 3:45:56 PM
^no...netflix pays the provider for their content to be delivered effectively. Netflix then upcharges you.[Edited on December 21, 2010 at 3:48 PM. Reason : .....]
12/21/2010 3:47:46 PM
If TWW doesn't pay their provider to have their pages load quickly, it could take up to 10 minutes for an image on TWW to load for you
12/21/2010 3:50:11 PM
12/21/2010 3:53:08 PM
^ This is where the FCC ruling comes into play. It disallows TWC and line internet companies to do this while, for some reason, allowing wireless providers to continue to have this option.
12/21/2010 4:08:28 PM
I'm leery of allowing the federal government to get their foot in the door with Internet regulation. Once that becomes an open frontier for the FCC, we'll be seeing the government protecting us from ourselves sometime down the line.
12/21/2010 4:32:04 PM
Basically, everything I've been reading/watching on this subject is under the impression that this FCC ruling is going to go to litigation and then eventually be over turned. I'm actually against the FCC controlling how ISP's function because they haven't really been blocking content in the first place. The fact that they could is why the FCC is deeming it necessary to regulate. It's a free market, right? So if TWC or Verizon (each of whom currently provide online services to me) start blocking sites from me or start severely regulating my bandwith I will switch to another service provider. My point is, I haven't noticed them doing this yet, so why does it need to be regulated in the first place?
12/21/2010 4:37:40 PM
12/21/2010 4:55:35 PM
12/21/2010 5:00:12 PM
12/21/2010 5:03:03 PM
One problem is the cable companies attempted to leverage their existing copper lines (which were no doubt subsidized in the past via tax payer monies) as long as possible by selling everyone a connection that if all used simultaneously would crawl the network. This worked until applications were invented to use all the bandwidth. This caught the cable companies with their pants down. And rather than invest the capital that won't pay off for decades (and lets be honest, will just be a not nice hit to the bottom line which takes makes CEO bonuses less) they have been going the throttle, DPI, legislation route to keep their cash cow alive as long as possible.
12/21/2010 5:07:43 PM
also, net neutrality is more than just preventing an ISP for charging certain providers or charging users for one type of data over another.It is also supposed to be about preventing an ISP from slowing packets for certain services. IE: they can't throttle your bit torrents or Netflix movies while leaving their own streaming service un-restricted to encourage you to subscribe to their service.Basically, with the progression of cable companies becoming ISPs, there is a conflict of interest in that the delivery network that company A owns to distribute its content is also used to distribute company B's content. Company B is Company A's competitor. This regulation is to prevent Company A from hindering the delivery of Company B's content, effectively taking Company B out of the market, or at least hindering Company B's access to the market.
12/21/2010 5:08:53 PM