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 Topmounter Sent By Grocery Clerks
join:2001-02-20 Evergreen, CO
·Cox HSI
| This is why... ...you don't want your government legislating how broadband service providers can and cannot do business.
The concept of "Net Neutrality" may appear on the surface to be a benevolent act on the part of a government for the betterment of all, but in the end, like most things the government gets involved in, it will just end up being a thinly guised method for the government to promote their own agenda and favor their friends, stifling competition and choice. | |
|   FicmanS Premium join:2005-01-11 Brownsburg, IN clubs: | Re: This is why... Big brother wants his cut... | |
|  |   peter_m Premium join:2005-07-13 Canada, QC
1 edit | Re: This is why... In some cases it's not even big brother. It can be the cousin, the uncle, the nephew or a friend of the country's leader that owns the existing long-distance or cell phone service. If a new comer starts to change the rules of the game, the relatives of the leader start to complain to him... and apparently he listens. | |
|  BosstonesOwn
join:2002-12-15 Everett, MA clubs:
·Comcast
| said by Topmounter :...you don't want your government legislating how broadband service providers can and cannot do business. The concept of "Net Neutrality" may appear on the surface to be a benevolent act on the part of a government for the betterment of all, but in the end, like most things the government gets involved in, it will just end up being a thinly guised method for the government to promote their own agenda and favor their friends, stifling competition and choice. Dude take a look at how the government wanted to add a net tax last year or maybe a bit before.
They want to take money from as many places as possible. It's nothing to do with net neutrality. -- "It's always funny until someone gets hurt......and then it's absolutely friggin' hysterical!" | |
|   nixen Rockin' the Boxen Premium join:2002-10-04 Alexandria, VA
·Cox HSI
·Speakeasy
| said by Topmounter :...you don't want your government legislating how broadband service providers can and cannot do business. Uh, no... This would be an example of why you don't want government in the position of being a competitor within a given service space.
said by Topmounter :The concept of "Net Neutrality" may appear on the surface to be a benevolent act on the part of a government for the betterment of all, but in the end, like most things the government gets involved in, it will just end up being a thinly guised method for the government to promote their own agenda and favor their friends, stifling competition and choice. And you get this from the topic at hand, how, exactly? Sounds like you're looking for any opportunity you can find to push your own bias, whether it's relevant or not.
-tom -- "Experience should teach us to be most on our guard to protect liberty when the government's purposes are beneficial. The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well meaning but without understanding." -Louis D Brandeis | |
|  |  |   karlmarx
join:2006-09-18 iraq
·Fairpoint Communic..
| Re: This is why... Exactly HOW will net neutrality hurt the consumer. If I'm the consumer, I want an INTERNET CONNECTION. That's what net neutrality enforces. It FORCES the companies to provide an 'internet connection', not an AOL connection. If I wanted AOL's walled garden, I'd sign up for AOL.
Net Neutrality isn't just a good idea, it's a REQUIRED IDEA. If we don't stop the megacorps from imposing 'their' vision of what the internet is, we won't have the googles, the yahoo's, the utubes of the world. We won't have bittorrent. We won't have Vonage. We won't have ANY of the features that make the internet what it is today. The megacorp has one objective, and that's to rape the consumer for as much as possible, while providing the lowest level of service possible, for the highest price possible. If we don't have net netrality, plan on seeing an extra charge on your bill if you visit google. Don't kid yourselves, the executives of Verizon, AT&T, SBC, etc all want to charge MORE for LESS. They even state it in their press releases. -- Stick it to the MAN. Support your local torrent sites. Proudly providing 10mb of upstream for all your TV, Movie, and MP3 needs. | |
|  |  |  |   kyramilan
join:2006-11-26 Pensacola, FL
| If they don't pay they don't play. India is a country and can pass whatever law they want. If Skype doesn't like, so???
If you don't think taxes are going to hit VOIP in the USA, you're nuts. I have a problem paying a real phone company so people can get cheap service with a VOIP like Vonage. I'm subsiziding their calls somewhere.  | |
|   lakino Premium join:2003-04-03 Campbell, CA
| said by Topmounter :...you don't want your government legislating how broadband service providers can and cannot do business. The concept of "Net Neutrality" may appear on the surface to be a benevolent act on the part of a government for the betterment of all, but in the end, like most things the government gets involved in, it will just end up being a thinly guised method for the government to promote their own agenda and favor their friends, stifling competition and choice. BS! Net Neutrality has nothing do with any government banning voip or Skype.
If anyone tries to project the banning of anything on the net as advocacy of "net neutrality" they are an out and out propagandist. BS!
Yes to Net Neutrality! No to the banning of Voip or Skype! --
In an uncertain world, there is absolutely no security in banding together. -- Robert X. Cringely | |
|  |   Topmounter Sent By Grocery Clerks
join:2001-02-20 Evergreen, CO
·Cox HSI
| Re: This is why... Very simply, Net neutrality is government regulation of the Internet. It may start innocent enough, but this is a Pandora's box that you do not want to open.
If there is only 1 ISP available, then I don't have a problem with some sort of "Net Neutrality" regulation applying.
I want multiple providers competing for my business. There is no incentive to enter the market and compete if the government requires you to sell the same vanilla service as the incumbent. | |
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