DancingOutlaw
No sloppy, slimy eggs plz
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2010
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No it's not. It's more like a nudge in favor of some corporations over other corporations.
Why didn't they "cost more" before?
Again, why weren't they capping me before?
True but it is also a nudge to those corporations over consumer.
Net Neutrality kept them from setting data caps as a pricing tier. Pricing was based on bandwidth. Wireless communication introduced the Data pricing because they were providing a link to the fiber backbone and it was a way to ease network traffic on overloaded cell towers.
Net Neutrality
Therefore less government is good.
Government contracts happen only because the government took the funds from consumers and businesses. And the bureaucrats don't go away after they've been fulfilled.
True but it is also a nudge to those corporations over consumer.
Net Neutrality kept them from setting data caps as a pricing tier. Pricing was based on bandwidth.
The regulations you speak allowed for monopolies to be created without competition. But I know you are pro big business monopolies and anti government.
3 years ago it didn't. Everything worked just fine. Did the people who hated Comcast and Time Warner in 2014 stop hating them in 2016?
They probably switched service if they could but I don't remember comcast and Time warner receiving love at anytime.
Why AT&Ts merger with Time Warner is such a huge deal:
The potential merger highlights one of the most definitive trends of the modern media business: the push from tech and telecommunications giants to control the lucrative, popular content they once passively supplied.
How Net neutrality helped kill the Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger - CNET
How is doing away with NN good for consumers? Anyone? The only thing I can think of it might make people pay a premium for stupid posts. This is not directed at you or your posts just saying I have not heard how this is good for consumers.
Where are these monopolies? I can buy internet from multiple companies that have cables and fiber running right down my street. I can buy it from multiple wireless providers. If the government stays out of the way, someday there should be boxes on the streets of every populated area blasting out WAN-like access.
As I've already mentioned, there are already laws in place that limit monopolistic practices by the big, bad, abusive corporations. Monopolies have been permitted, actually exclusivity for a finite period of time, as an incentive for businesses to build out a communication infrastructure where none existed. As those exclusivity incentives expire over builders have been added in the government controlled right of ways to bring competition. More cables can be strung on those poles and will be when consumers are charged unreasonable amounts for their access.
Capitalism works. Socialism fails.
The regulations that Bill did away with did not allowed you the choice. Before that you had one phone, and one cable company. There was a phone bill and a cable bill. Your taxes paid for those local monopolies. And to this day the house I grew up in would not have cable if it wasn't for a government grant to the County.
A government incentive conceived long ago to build out a non-existant infrastructure is completely different from net neutrality legislation. Also Net Neutrality has no effect on rural areas served by NCTC and/or the public utilities that provide access. The heavily populated areas don't require NN as competition exists in those areas and it will grow if predatory pricing hits the consumers being served. Dems are smoke screening reality.
They probably switched service if they could but I don't remember comcast and Time warner receiving love at anytime.
How is doing away with NN good for consumers?
My point is NN didn't "fix" anything. ISP's were a mixed bag before and they still are.
In the short run, it won't make much of a difference either way. ISP's weren't magically better the last 2 years and they weren't worse either. Layers and layers of rules help to entrench the status quo. They don't allow for a free and robust marketplace to thrive.
No matter how you choose to view things, internet service has become substantially and consistently better year by year for the last 20+ years. Why are we suddenly so afraid of a market that produced such results? It's alarmism at its finest.
So the biggest cost to the consumer is less improvement of these technologies over time.
And again, the landmark NN case was not about the consumer at all and it actually reduced consumer choices. How can that be in the best interest of the consumer? The FCC is not your savior.
Great how does that benefit the consumer?
Where are these monopolies? I can buy internet from multiple companies that have cables and fiber running right down my street. I can buy it from multiple wireless providers. If the government stays out of the way, someday there should be boxes on the streets of every populated area blasting out WAN-like access.
As I've already mentioned, there are already laws in place that limit monopolistic practices by the big, bad, abusive corporations. Monopolies have been permitted, actually exclusivity for a finite period of time, as an incentive for businesses to build out a communication infrastructure where none existed. As those exclusivity incentives expire over builders have been added in the government controlled right of ways to bring competition. More cables can be strung on those poles and will be when consumers are charged unreasonable amounts for their access.
Capitalism works. Socialism fails.
How did NN reduce choice? Pretty sure it helped all of the streaming services.