Nirvanadragones
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2005
- Posts
- 14,399
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Ya know, Roxanne, for someone who cares so much about freedom you don't seem to mind too much when it's restricted by certain segments of society.
Because that's the sole function of the human race, duh...So we're going to have the Rupert Murdoch thing going on with the internet? Great
Why does everything in life have to be about making a profit?
Well, according to some people your worth as a human being is only as great as your contribution to the economy.Because that's the sole function of the human race, duh...![]()
So we're going to have the Rupert Murdoch thing going on with the internet? Great
Why does everything in life have to be about making a profit?
The goal is to increase bandwidth. Net neutrality takes away an important incentive for these competitors to do so. It essentially creates "regulated competition," which means none at all. The fear it seeks to exploit would be closer to true with it than without it.
In the meantime, given the amount of bandwidth that exists, there are good reasons for providers to prioritize content, and possibly to price it differently. If I only do minimal video why should I subsidize someone who is non-stop down-and-uploading mega-streams of high-def video, given that their use consumes scads more bandwidth than mine?
So we're going to have the Rupert Murdoch thing going on with the internet? Great
Why does everything in life have to be about making a profit?
Of course, the bogeyman scenario in that link is rubbish, but there are instances whehn we vould need better rules for a level polaying field on this market.Why should providers be able to prioritize content? Good network management. If I'm sending email or downloading big files, I can wait a second or two, but if I'm using VOIP I can't - I need to hear the next word right now. Given a certain amount of bandwidth, management must make these choices.
You're seeing no risk at all of infrastructure/service cartels, in which one VoIP gets prioritized over another, in all other regards equal competitor? Doesn't affect the ISP bandwidth concern a smitten, but it affects their bottom line, thru shareholding or kickback. And a service provider with a good product but no affifliation with ISPs have a much harder time gaining foothold.
The goal is not to increase bandwidth... that can only be done by INCREASING bandwidth. The goal is to make better use of the bandwidth they have so they don't have to INCREASE bandwidth.
The answer seems quite simple to me and it's stupid that access companies haven't jumped on the bandwagon -- Charge the customer for the bandwidth used.
Oh wait, I know why... Because the access companies WANT you to go to them for everything -- your phone, your tv, your news... therefore charging for bandwidth goes counter to their efforts, but charging for you going to someone else's content that makes sense.
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I'm not sure I totally understand your question, but I'll try.You're seeing no risk at all of infrastructure/service cartels, in which one VoIP gets prioritized over another, in all other regards equal competitor? Doesn't affect the ISP bandwidth concern a smitten, but it affects their bottom line, thru shareholding or kickback. And a service provider with a good product but no affifliation with ISPs have a much harder time gaining foothold.
Just asking.
Won't happen universally. Expect some division along bandwidth/speed lines. Corps like Google, who depend on volume traffic for income, will not restrict volume (and hits) except for specific sectors - other corporate bodies - who will be offered a premium service targeted to their needs. For most 'home users' the general improvement in service and delivery will more than compensate for peak hour restriction on band width - who remembers dial-up? Who remembers when you had the choice of using your telephone or the Internet? It was less than a handful of years ago.
You're seeing no risk at all of infrastructure/service cartels, in which one VoIP gets prioritized over another, in all other regards equal competitor? Doesn't affect the ISP bandwidth concern a smitten, but it affects their bottom line, thru shareholding or kickback. And a service provider with a good product but no affifliation with ISPs have a much harder time gaining foothold.
Just asking.
Huh. I though I was one of the ones helping them to gain a foothold by paying through the nose to a good-product service provider with no ISP affiliation. I get business class service (ie lightning fast no matter what time of day) and they get a creamier profit margin with which to develop product improvements... Maybe the airline model isn't the right way for me to think about this.
H