Comments on: Senator wants to ban 'fast lane' for Web
Bill would bar Net providers from charging content providers, retailers for speedier service.
Bill would bar Net providers from charging content providers, retailers for speedier service.
January 2, 2010 6:26 PM PST
January 2, 2010 4:56 PM PST
January 2, 2010 4:16 PM PST
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easily envision a future in which just about everything on the
Internet is prioritized for those willing to pay the most to get it,
while the masses are shunted off to limited content old AOL style
portals.
Are we complaining that Whole Foods is giving unfair treatment to those who want better food? Is Apple giving "preferential treatment" to those who like their OS? Is Google too good?
Come on, this is old school socialism in a tech guise. Let the network providers offer whatever services they choose, and let the customers (read: the public) decide. Let the options flourish, and let the good ones win.
The infrastructure can only improve when customers are willing and able to pay for it, just like everything forward-thinking innovation of the past. Net neutrality laws actually make it illegal to buy better service. How absurd, especially in an environment that has thrived due to an absence of rules.
Please don't create new rules to punish a crime that doesn't exist. More here:
http://www.onlyrepublican.com/orinsf/net_neutrality_and_municipal_wifi/
make there netowrk go faster to the end user, thus forcing
yahoo and all the others to pay up to be competative. All the
while the end user has no clue why googles searchs are that
much faster. They must have the better search engine? Not true
they just pay more to provide faster searches. While I agree this
economy is based on pay more get more Im not sure I agree
with this scheme as I see it. Is this law the best way to deal with
it? I dont know, but if anything it will open some eyes, some
eyes that need to be opened to what could come.
Also, you know, people are about through putting-up with this BOGUS "let the marketplace decide" argument, which is actually nothing more than a euphemism for "let business do whatever it wants", ...no matter what other interests are trampled in the process.
The law treats common carriers as necessities and discourages
efforts to shut out segments of the population who lack power,
particularly the poor. We need legislation to make sure that the
Internet does not become something available only to the middle
and upper classes precisely because of selfish, uncaring persons
like you.
And, no, I will not be reading the Republican piffle you are pushing.
That's like my first-class mail getting somewhere faster than yours because I'm willing to pay more.
Dude, its all just electrical signals and the telcos would have to SPEND money to implement this (with DHCP I'd hate to have to be the one administering the tables,) to get this 'anti-democratization' of the web implemented.
Its like you having to pay more to get electricity delivered over the wire to your door because the power generating company doesn't like your choice in shoe color.
http://www.newnetworks.com/broadbandscandals.htm
Greedheads.
Michael Hoffman
See3 - Media for Nonprofits
http://www.see3.net
administrations overturned previous rules and allowed media
companies to become conglomerates. But, that did not have to
happen. It was a choice made by the same conservatives who
babble about 'competition' out of the other side of their mouths.
After the AT&T and Enron scandals, it appears that still nothing
has been learned. There are still far too many people incapable
of questioning the notion 'businesses know best.' There hasn't
really been a free market since the beginning of mercantile
capitalism, or perhaps sooner.
The role of government should be to protect the weak from the
powerful. In this scenario, the consumer is not the powerful
party, though some people are too foolish to realize that.
- Telecom Scam
- by jdbwar07 March 4, 2006 1:20 PM PST
- The telecom companies have been ripping us all off for a very long time. The US now has very poor internet quality compared to other countries. In east asia, for example, they have 100mbps connections. The US is kind of the laughing stock for broadband service, which is sad considering it invented the internet.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(19 Comments)If you care about the future of the internet in America, please take a quick look at this site:
www.newnetworks.com .
This site (and the book "The $200 Billion Broadband Scandal") tells how the telecom companies took $200 billion from US taxpayers in order to rewire America with high-speed fiber optic connections (45 mbps both ways), and then ripped us all off by keeping the money and not delivering.
Because of all this I think their claim that they need this type of thing to improve service is a bunch of bunk. If they really cared they would increase connection speeds to be more in line with other countries. Again, please look at newnetworks.com or teletruth.org . These companies have the ethics of Enron and need to be put in line.