In other words, nobody around here thinks that what the comic shows (metaphorically) actually happens. Nobody armed with evidence anyway.
However the public at large might. So--poor show from the writers in misleading deliberately or otherwise.
No, what it means is that you don't understand what they are depicting so you make stuff up and claim it is what they are depicting.
The Driveway is not "Bandwidth" it's a connection. Nothing is being wasted because whether the left or right lane is used, it's the same driveway. The Comic is merely depicting that you end up with a choice of navigating a bunch of junk designed to slow you down or stop you, or pay more to have it removed and allow you fast access, but only to the "Premium stuff" which they determine. Your failure to understand does not make the comic misleading, it just means you don't get it.
NZ's telco framework is a lot more messed up.
Bollocks, our system is nowhere near messed up, it's pretty easy really.
One set of lines (well two now that the high speed fibre is going in) all owned by the lines company. ISP's hire their bandwidth from the lines company.
The biggest issue with our system is that on the national level we have multiple lines because the Government started out with the same system as in the States, (Telecom owned both the lines and the provided the services) forcing as it was then, Clear Communications, to built its own national network.
And guess what, the unbundling of the local loop, and splitting Telecom's local lines department off into Chorus came via Government Regulation 4 years after Telecom had convinced them not to allow it (despite the Commerce Commission's recommendation and Telecom's competitors demanding it) and then spectacularly failing to live up to their end on the bargain that they had struck (implementing only 10% of the 500,000 new connections they had claimed they would do.) Without that regulation we'd likely still all be hostage to Telecom's whims, and anyone with their competitors would be paying huge amounts to use the local loop (which was originally built with Taxpayer money).