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Forums » Comcast on Net Neutrality: Apocalyptic Gobbledygook » Two mouth holes. Guess where the other one is..
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Wait a second...thats not what ol' Bri said. »
« Something that does not exsist get so much attention.  
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TK Junk Mail
Go ahead, make my day
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join:2002-03-03
Margate City, NJ
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·Comcast

reply to pb5k
Re: Two mouth holes. Guess where the other one is..

said by pb5k See Profile :

Thread is over, Ahrenl wins.
Sorry, NGOwner makes a better argument and is the wisest course of action: »Re: I believe everything he says..

Cohen's best points:
Nevertheless, net neutrality proponents are again in full-throated attack mode, marching a new parade of horribles down the boulevard of the hypothetical. But the two grievances they cite are really phantoms: One reported claim of content-blocking by a telephone company was promptly snuffed out by the FCC last year. In the other, Cox was accused of mendaciously blocking access to online advertising competitor Craigslist when, in fact, third-party software -- soon fixed by its manufacturer -- was the real culprit.

And once we start down this windy regulatory road, why exempt from coverage Google's dominant position in Internet searches, eBay's dominant position in online auctions, Amazon's dominant position in online retailing of books and other products, or (again) Microsoft's dominant position in computer operating systems and in Internet browsers?
Getting more government regulation never solved anything, only made it worse.
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pb5k
more cowbell
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join:2005-11-16
Tempe, AZ
·Verizon Online DSL

said by TK Junk Mail See Profile :

Getting more government regulation never solved anything, only made it worse.
Hardly. Clean air regulation (especially in California) has made quality of life better for many people. Clean water regulation is good too. I for one, prefer not to have arsenic and chromium in my water like they do in China. Here is the result of free-market deregulation in its extreme. It's not something I would care to see here.
--
"When they call the roll in the Senate, the Senators do not know whether to answer 'Present' or 'Not guilty.'" --
Theodore Roosevelt


batterup
I Can Not Tell A Lie.
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join:2003-02-06
Netcong, NJ
clubs:
·Verizon Online DSL

said by pb5k See Profile :

said by TK Junk Mail See Profile :

Getting more government regulation never solved anything, only made it worse.
Hardly. Clean air regulation (especially in California) has made quality of life better for many people.
That is comparing apples to oranges. We all own the air we all don't own a business network.


pb5k
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join:2005-11-16
Tempe, AZ
·Verizon Online DSL

Actually I was responding to TK's very general statement that all government regulation is inherently bad. That is simply not true and I chose two of many examples to highlight that.

The internet is certainly a more complex issue. And while I agree the internet has a large business component it is also utilized for educational, government and military functions as well.

I don't particularly like the notion of the internet being regulated by the same people who think it's a series of tubes (although there are some people in congress smarter than that guy); But neither do I want corporations (whose only legal obligation is to shareholders) to regulate my usage either.
--
"When they call the roll in the Senate, the Senators do not know whether to answer 'Present' or 'Not guilty.'" --
Theodore Roosevelt


batterup
I Can Not Tell A Lie.
Premium
join:2003-02-06
Netcong, NJ
clubs:
·Verizon Online DSL

said by pb5k See Profile :

military functions as well.
The DoD has their own private internet, they can't afford to have their internets held up by sticky tubes.
Forums » Comcast on Net Neutrality: Apocalyptic GobbledygookWait a second...thats not what ol' Bri said. »
« Something that does not exsist get so much attention.  


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