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A pervert's take on Net Neutrality

1 pointsby livealifeabout 5 years ago

1 comment

kstenerudabout 5 years ago
&gt; These services use vast amounts of data and bandwidth for free on ISPs infrastructure.<p>... at the whim of the ISP&#x27;s customer. The CUSTOMERS are the ones demanding the data, not Hulu and Google.<p>&gt; While this will increase consumer costs in the short terms as the big players pass it on, it will mean better and cheaper access in the long term.<p>Or, with Net Neutrality, ISPs will have to compete on the quality and price of service they charge their actual customers, without arbitrarily locking certain services (which they themselves aren&#x27;t producing) to rich people.<p>&gt; With Net Neutrality, anyone can access content such as nudity, riots, suicides or other illegal websites.<p>This argument is completely orthogonal to Net Neutrality. ISPs can be required to block such content regardless of Net Neutrality.<p>&gt; ISPs can also crackdown on peer-to-peer file-sharing, which is responsible for a lot of illegal downloads, thus preventing piracy.<p>Same argument, same reason why it&#x27;s invalid.<p>&gt; Parts of the Internet could be free<p>... At the cost of arbitrarily marking certain parts of the internet the &quot;rich people&quot; internet.<p>&gt; “basic” internet (e.g. Wikipedia and Facebook) could be completely free.<p>Once again, locking the internet such that poor people can&#x27;t access the rich peoples&#x27; internet, but rather are locked to a tiny mind prison. As opposed to innovating cheaper ways to provide the entire internet (say, Starlink?)<p>&gt; Net Neutrality slows things down &gt; Net neutrality is a form of regulation, and that does not bode well for fast reactions to changes in internet technology and use cases.<p>This argument makes no sense.<p>&gt; Net Neutrality harms the “Economy” &gt; By repealing Net Neutrality, different pricing schemes could stimulate more competition within companies, which could be advantageous to the economy.<p>By not repealing it, different companies could stimulate more competition within the ISP ecosystem. There is no &quot;harm&quot; here.<p>&gt; Furthermore, net neutrality is said to preserve the Internet. However, the opposite might be true. In fact, net neutrality may not be necessary.<p>&quot;might&quot;, &quot;may&quot;. Weasel words to make it seem like an argument was made when no such thing has happened.<p>&gt; In all the years before, the Internet functioned very well without it.<p>... because no ISPs had the monopoly or oligopoly power to try to enforce price-tiered internet access before.<p>&gt; Additionally, the government’s efforts to regulate the Internet has always been counterproductive.<p>... hand waving, sweeping statement. BTW, did you know that it was government regulation that forced the telephone companies to allow consumers to plug in competitors&#x27; phones to their networks? Before that, Bell only allowed Bell branded phones to be plugged in, because it made no business sense to allow otherwise in a monopoly. And those phones were PRICEY!<p>&gt; This success of the Internet proves that new regulations are unnecessary.<p>No it doesn&#x27;t.<p>&gt; Moreover, the fears that consumers have are hypothetical.<p>Like your &quot;might&quot;, &quot;may&quot;, and &quot;could&quot; arguments?<p>&gt; Precisely, this is about ISPs lying to consumers or degrading content.<p>Is it?<p>&gt; Besides, Comcast (an American telecommunications Corporation) blocked Bittorent’s traffic eight years ago.<p>What does this have to do with Net Neutrality? And wasn&#x27;t a previous argument of yours that you need to repeal Net Neutrality to support this? Which is it?<p>&gt; Also, Apple introduced Facetime over wireless networks before cellular networks.<p>What does this have to do with Net Neutrality?<p>&gt; With those broken Net Neutrality regulations, the internet speed we have in 10 years from now would be the same as it is today.<p>Really? That doesn&#x27;t seem to be the case in the rest of the world.