Upchurch
Papa Funkosophy
You failure to understand does not make the comic misleading, it just means you don't get it.
It means she doesn't get it and then makes up straw man arguments.
You failure to understand does not make the comic misleading, it just means you don't get it.
Blindness is not recognizing that what already happened (the Netflix slowdown) wouldn't be prevented by "net neutrality".
Actually it would have. With Net Neutrality, Comcast would have been obliged to treat the data from Netflicks the same as it did other data.
Instead of allowing the bottle necking to occur by locking ports in the exchange, they would have had to make sure that all of the ports were open and connected.
Opening up temporary ports was a courtesy that ISP's would expect returned when traffic flowed the other way. But Netflix's carrier would never return that favor, because the traffic never flowed the other way.
Bollocks, in fact the picture that quadraginta posted above shows exactly this. Level 3 had all of their ports open and available for use, it was Comcast that decided to not open their side.
Level 3 never said they wouldn't return the favour at all
Wrong again. The picture Quadraginta linked to was about Verizon, not Comcast.
Of course they didn't say that. They didn't have to. But they wouldn't return the favor, because they would never need to, because the traffic was never going to be symmetric It was only ever going to hit 100% utilization in one direction. So Comcast decided not to make any extra effort for no reciprocal benefit. Is that nice? No, it's not. Is that something net neutrality could prevent? Again, no. Net neutrality does not delve into the details of bandwidth load balancing, and this is a content-neutral decision. The only reason it affected Netflix is because Netflix made up most of that asymmetric bandwidth load. And Comcast (and Verizon, for that matter) was never obliged to do peering ports for anybody.
I'm having trouble understanding why you're spending pages and pages dying on this hill.
Again, Streisand effect.
The one that goes "government may act in my interest, corporations never will". It is as blind as the reverse "corporaions may act in my interest, government never will". It is a cariucature polarization the like of which one sees plenty around here (both sides).Which ideology is that?
Ha ha. You excuse the graphic misrepresentation because you agree with the recommendation of the piece. Rather than admit they misrepresent what actually happens you make a futile attempt to "defend" it. How silly.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 one that goes "government may act in my interest, corporations never will". It is as blind as the reverse "corporaions may act in my interest, government never will". It is a cariucature polarization the like of which one sees plenty around here (both sides).
The Internet Association said:The Internet Association applauds President Obama’s proposal for the adoption of meaningful net neutrality rules that apply to both mobile and fixed broadband. As we have previously said, the FCC must adopt strong, legally sustainable rules that prevent paid prioritization and protect an open Internet for users. Using Title II authority, along with the right set of enforceable rules, the President’s plan would establish the strong net neutrality protections Internet users require. We welcome the President’s leadership, and encourage the FCC to stand with the Internet’s vast community of users and move quickly to adopt strong net neutrality protections that ensure a free and open Internet.
Glad you do.I agree that it would be better.
Via regulation paradoxically, but pro-competition regulation and nothing to do with neutrality, requiring the incumbent infrastructure owner to allow open access to last-mile wire and allow any competing ISP to re-sell.How is this achieved?
Neutrality requirements have undesired consequences in addition to the ones you desire. Also there is a significant chance that one ends up stuck with regulation that is itself abused (captured). YMMV.Until such time as it might be, wouldn't some sort of net neutrality guarantees avoid potential abuse?
Ha ha. You excuse the graphic misrepresentation because you agree with the recommendation of the piece. Rather than admit they misrepresent what actually happens you make a futile attempt to "defend" it. How silly.
They also misrepresent the working of a two sided market with a false statement: "I end up paying for the same data twice".
AgreeGovernments want my vote so it behoves them to act somewhat in my interests so I will vote for them.
Also agreedCorporations have no need to act in my best interests unless I am a consumer of their goodsq
You don't understand two sided markets either.It's like the Post Office charging you to deliver your mail after charging the sender for delivering it to you, they would be double dipping. In the end, the Provider is going to pass that charge on to you, so yes, you would be being charged twice for the same data.
Also agreed
So you agree with me and disagree with the statement I challenge. Yet you seem to want to claim you don't
Probably you will claim that Upchurch does not mean what Upchurch said and I have "misinterpreted a metaphor" or something. That is amusing.
I see what they draw. Which is a driveway with its total width impeded.I defend it because I understand what they are saying, you clearly don't
You don't understand two sided markets either.
Go and fix your misunderstanding please. And the post office is typically a monopoly so change your example. Throughout this everything I have said on the subject requires adequate competition, and if that is absent then the appropriate fix is to increase it.
So drop your straw ladies and your misrepresentation borne of ignorance.
I see what they draw. Which is a driveway with its total width impeded.
You claim to understand that they don't actually mean that total data capacity is reduced. Maybe they don't. But you have not proved that they don't mean this. Neither can you possibly know that "nobody" will interpret that as what it shows--a reduction in total capacity. So your defence is kinda hollow.
You have already demonstrated that you yourself have been successfully misled into thinking that a two sided market is "double dipping".