New net neutrality rules coming from FCC - Technology & Science - CBC News
A couple problems I have with this:
1) I have not met a single person that supports this plan. No blogs. No comments in newspaper comment sections. The public really dislikes this idea through and through. They want the internet to remain open and neutral. They don't want bandwidth to be monetized. But the public has absolutely no say on this apparently.
2) The monetization of bandwidth doesn't help anyone using the internet. The only people it helps is the internet service providers. It gives them an extra revenue stream. But why should an ISP even be looking at bandwidth? Isn't their job to provide internet? They should not even be monitoring who is using a lot of bandwidth and who is using little. They just hook you into the grid. Just like with land line telephones: the telephone line companies did not monitor if you were talking for 10 hours a day or not at all. And they wouldn't charge you any different whether you talked 10 hours or not at all...they would charge the same to everyone.
3) The internet is global and is not confined to just the USA. But by allowing for the monetization of bandwidth, you give American companies the ability to control internet usage in other countries that did not have anything to do with the FCCs new rules. Who owns the internet? The US doesn't, right?
A couple problems I have with this:
1) I have not met a single person that supports this plan. No blogs. No comments in newspaper comment sections. The public really dislikes this idea through and through. They want the internet to remain open and neutral. They don't want bandwidth to be monetized. But the public has absolutely no say on this apparently.
2) The monetization of bandwidth doesn't help anyone using the internet. The only people it helps is the internet service providers. It gives them an extra revenue stream. But why should an ISP even be looking at bandwidth? Isn't their job to provide internet? They should not even be monitoring who is using a lot of bandwidth and who is using little. They just hook you into the grid. Just like with land line telephones: the telephone line companies did not monitor if you were talking for 10 hours a day or not at all. And they wouldn't charge you any different whether you talked 10 hours or not at all...they would charge the same to everyone.
3) The internet is global and is not confined to just the USA. But by allowing for the monetization of bandwidth, you give American companies the ability to control internet usage in other countries that did not have anything to do with the FCCs new rules. Who owns the internet? The US doesn't, right?