Francesca R
Girl
It seems as if you are peddling some "regulation / service requirements = theft" line. So is Phantomwolf.So given away instead of stolen then.
Are you right-wing tiny-government fundies or something?
It seems as if you are peddling some "regulation / service requirements = theft" line. So is Phantomwolf.So given away instead of stolen then.
More misdirection. Nothing is "taken away". If you think something is--say what was taken away. Exactly.
I don't think you wish to discuss the matter honestly.
What, exactly, do we consumers spank them with?
If I want to take my business away from TWC around here my only practical alternative is DSL
That isn't going to do much to improve my bandwidth.
I pay extra for higher speed service. My connection has never reached anywhere close to the the promised capacity. Not ever.
But if I don't pay the premium it would be even worse. With the devices we use in our household (pretty much average) we are pushing the usefulness of what bandwidth we do manage to achieve.
So tell me how to spank TWC. So that they would notice, that is.
Agreed.
Agreed, that is trivially obvious.
The last part is not.
Your self-contradiction is highlighted. You are welcome.Forcing people to give away things that they own is commonly viewed as theft or being things being taken away. After all you are not about giving them the choice of if they will sell it or not.
I think I agreed that the one that increases profit would thrive.So the company that forgoes profit is the one that thrives?
How does that work?
Rejected, again. Completely untrue. What assets were stolen from BT? What assets were stolen from Telecom NZ.
What assets?
Please list the assets that were stolen.
Ding ding. Maybe we have a winner. You don't know that that is exactly how Openreach and Chorus came into being?
Whose issue is that?
It seems as if you are peddling some "regulation / service requirements = theft" line. So is Phantomwolf.
Are you right-wing tiny-government fundies or something?
Your self-contradiction is highlighted. You are welcome.
You have yet to list what assets were "stolen". That means confiscated for no compensation.Again you seem to be ignoring what you are being told The lost of Assets from BT and Telecom was because they breached their agreements, not because the Government confiscated them.
I think I agreed that the one that increases profit would thrive.
[ . . . checks post . . . ]
Yes I am pretty sure I did.
So you are wrongly calling it theft because special interests (that you presumably oppose) would (wrongly) call it theft?And being spun as theft is exactly what the add campaigns of all the major content owners would do. So suddenly all anyone hears is that the government is stealing the private property of the companies. That will go over like a lead balloon in congress, especially with the results of the last election.
Forced break up, via legislation and/or courts.How do you view taking something that you currently own and then making it so that you don't own it anymore as something other than theft?
Quite correct.But as you need to force them to sell them, it seems that they are probably not getting what it is really worth to them after all.
Yeah, I'm afraid I'm going to have to disagree with you disagreement.
I think companies want to make money. I'm not sure what you think. They are not charities. Sans regulation they will do what will make the most money. If that means shafting the customer then they will. A lack of net neutrality leaves many, many avenues open to charge customers more then they do now. (Oh, if you want the HD films to be streamed, that'll cost you more. Oh no, we own the line into your house so you can't go elsewhere). Without net neutrality those money making opportunities will be taken to the detriment of the customer.
So you are wrongly calling it theft because special interests (that you presumably oppose) would (wrongly) call it theft?
Yeah that makes sense.
Forced break up, via legislation and/or courts.
You going to try and say that has never happened in the US telecom industry?
Exactly.
And really, it seems pretty simple. It's in the best interest of Comcast, and whoever owns them, to strangle Netflix, since it's obviously competition against their own services. The claim isn't that the folks at Comcast are evil-doers at all - throttling the competition is what they are supposed to do, to bring in the maximum amount of money to their shareholders. And frankly, choking off Netflix, Skype, and whoever, is exactly what I would demand if I were the CEO of any of these companies, and if it were allowed legally.
And so, the solution is to ban the practice.
Yeah, no.
Comcast and Netflix are not competitors. They offer fundamentally different services.
Comcast and Netflix are not competitors.
No they don't. I've been sent plenty of emails from Comcast, HBO, and so forth, promising me streaming over the internet, in exchange for money. That is exactly what Netflix offers.