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Net Neutrality -- Electronic Frontier Foundation's explanation on what it is and what it means.
Electronic Frontier Foundation ^ | Unknown -- Posted 11/11/2014 | Electronic Frontier Foundation

Posted on 11/11/2014 11:50:38 AM PST by Usagi_yo

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To: Mariner
However, your argument is that government should decide, through regulation, what a property owner can do with his property, how the services derived from that property can be packaged and sold...who he can sell it to...AND force him to allow his distribution network to be used by his competitors to deliver THEIR product.

The idea of an Internet service provider is that you're going to be providing connections to other places around the world - which may end up competing against your own. If your service is better than the competitor, people will use it with no need to impair competition.

This is not too different from the concept of international trade, which is decidedly not a Communist idea. In addition, what kinds of innovation would be stopped by not extracting danegeld from someone that became too good of a service versus your own? If anything is out of the Communist playbook, it would be Comcast's strongarming of Netflix until they paid their danegeld.

Finally, if you want to argue about government intervention, consider that Internet service providers already have some degree of government control over them that is already objectionable. If you want to suggest a framework for achieving the same thing without NN (while accounting for the political/industry conditions of today), I'll be happy to hear it.

41 posted on 11/13/2014 4:23:57 PM PST by setha (It is past time for the United States to take back what the world took away.)
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To: setha
"If anything is out of the Communist playbook, it would be Comcast's strongarming of Netflix until they paid their danegeld."

Comcast owns that network, and no matter how despicable they may be, I support their right to determine what traffic they will allow on it and under what terms.

And you do not.

That's the only point of discussion.

If netflix is not happy with that, they can deliver via other means or build their own.

Do you, for some reason, believe that you or some collective does?

If so, what is your reasoning?

42 posted on 11/13/2014 7:45:17 PM PST by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: Mariner
If netflix is not happy with that, they can deliver via other means or build their own.

Given how it affected Comcast customers, delivering via other means or building their own would not solve the problem. Comcast specifically targeted Netflix traffic to drive customers away from Netflix.

Comcast owns that network, and no matter how despicable they may be, I support their right to determine what traffic they will allow on it and under what terms. ... That's the only point of discussion.

Does that mean you defend their sponsorship of government action that would impede competition in order to achieve that goal? They operate in a highly regulated environment where like-for-like alternatives are not consistently available or can be legislated out of existence - both to Comcast's favor. Without discussing the regulatory actions that can be taken to stifle competition, your argument only seeks to make a blind defense of Comcast.

43 posted on 11/14/2014 6:41:33 PM PST by setha (It is past time for the United States to take back what the world took away.)
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To: setha
"Does that mean you defend their sponsorship of government action that would impede competition in order to achieve that goal? "

You keep dodging the question of your own collectivist goals.

44 posted on 11/14/2014 8:27:55 PM PST by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: Mariner
You keep dodging the question of your own collectivist goals.

Kind of hard to dodge a question of goals that I do not possess. On the other hand, you presume that the existing environment operates freely enough to support their actions. If not this, then how could you see regulation actively being dropped such that the free market would not allow an ISP like Comcast to be rewarded for punishing Netflix?

At this point, I'd say that it'd be better to agree to disagree if this can't be resolved. You see it as a case of property rights while I see it as a case of increasing competition in a overly-regulated market.

45 posted on 11/14/2014 9:43:51 PM PST by setha (It is past time for the United States to take back what the world took away.)
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