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Forums » Crying Net-Neutrality Wolf » Conversely
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Wrong. »
« This kind of crap happens all the time  
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Karl Bode
News Guy
join:2000-03-02

Host:
Road Runner
PC gaming GAMES
PC gaming Tech

1 edit
reply to tsu9
Re: Conversely

quote:
Or, it can point out precisely how non-neutral nets will operate
But they won't operate by blocking two states from YouTube outight, or via a shoddy piece of security software. Neither instance is an accurate representation of how the threat will emerge, because it's unlikely an incumbent could get away with outright blocking of legal content.

The threat emerges via subtly de-prioritized competitor packets. Tariffs are applied, and from there competing content prices are driven up.


tsu9

join:2001-08-17
Wheeling, IL
Naturally, it is an exaggerated proportion, but the similarity is intact.


Karl Bode
News Guy
join:2000-03-02
Unintentional and limited is not a smaller proportion of intentional and broad. These are not cases of network neutrality violations, they are someone accidentally screwing up!

Shark_615

join:2006-01-17
Pickering, ON
reply to tsu9
No it isn't

What you are talking about is like saying that no internet connection and a reduced speed are the same thing when they clearly are not.


tsu9

join:2001-08-17
Wheeling, IL

reply to Karl Bode
You're missing the comparison. I'm not saying these are net neutrality violations, but rather the effect is--or could be--similar. The, "Oh, if a few packets get dropped, that isn't our problem. That website could upgrade to our AwesomeService Plus™ routing to gaurantee their traffic." is the comparison to which I was referring.


tsu9

join:2001-08-17
Wheeling, IL
reply to Shark_615
What happens when too many packets drop, "get lost", or are routed horribly?

dadarkside
Premium
join:2006-05-20
The Moon

When Akimai experiences a hardware failure, all kinds of net content have the potential to go "missing".

Screwups are along the same line.

Cox offered a security app that had blacklisted craigslist.

Cox is still neutral regarding craigslist. The security app is not.

Many, many of the ads on Craigslist, really aren't family friendly. I don't blame the app.

This one's on the end user, as long as Cox advises their users that uninstalling restores connectivity.
Forums » Crying Net-Neutrality WolfWrong. »
« This kind of crap happens all the time  


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