 Ahrenl
join:2004-10-26 North Andover, MA
·Verizon FIOS
| reply to Combat Chuck Re: Two mouth holes. Guess where the other one is..
Oh really? I seem to remember it being ABUNDANTLY clear that they were floundering after the backlash when they first announced their idea. Well maybe that's your problem. Selective memory. They've reinforced this point many times after their initial announcement.
So when it comes to freedom of information your willing to throw it all on the line and give the politicians, that don't understand the situation (the tubes you alluded to), the reigns; and that even with their ignorance of the situation they'll somehow write good regulation on the issue. Perhaps afterwards they can step outside and give marine one a tune up since they're so good at fixing things they obviously don't understand.
I'm willing to give it any chance rather than no chance, which is what we're left with. Believe it or not, some congressmen actually write legislation for a living, as opposed to tuning up airplanes [sarcasm] good analogy as usual [/sarcasm].
Ok, so you name one. (no one else, let Ahrenl prove he's not just blowing smoke) You don't want anyone else naming them because it would be too easy? Because you recognize that they exist? Saying "everything" is "always" "anything" is inherently incorrect "always". :P Example: Signed Yesterday, Pension reform, and tax cuts for the poor, and small business's. A Great piece of legislation, which is why there was no bickering over it. (except when they tried to add the removal of the estate tax, which isn't even supported by the ultra rich)
Implying that without regulation those people won't have unfettered access is speculation. How is that an argument against it? When talking about the future it's all speculation. This isn't a court of law.. you answer only implies that you have no way of refuting the assertion.
If you can just jump ship then why do you need legislation? Another provider will step in and offer unfettered access (which ironically is what the Comcast guy just proposed) I said I wouldn't pay them as much, I can't jump ship, as there's no other boat in the water. The legislation is needed to ensure that tiny sliver of free flowing information stays intact.
Oh does it? So if a company narrows that pipe to almost nothing but gives you another pipe to their "associates" which has the same effect as lowering qos for non "associate" sites, your ok with that; that company would still be net neutral. As long as the bandwidth allocation to the pipes are separate, they can do whatever they want. That's what I want the legislation to enforce. If they think that's the best business plan, then so be it. |
  Combat Chuck Too Many Cannibals Premium join:2001-11-29 Erie, PA
| said by Ahrenl :Implying that without regulation those people won't have unfettered access is speculation. How is that an argument against it? When talking about the future it's all speculation. This isn't a court of law.. you answer only implies that you have no way of refuting the assertion. said by Ahrenl :I'm willing to give it any chance rather than no chance, which is what we're left with. So what you're saying is that you're just scare-mongering? -- Early to rise, early to bed; Makes a man healthy but socially dead. |