I don't think you've got that right...
DirectTV is my Television Service Provider. They choose which TV Channels reach me through their service and it is not every single TV network available. They negotiate contracts with networks. If the negotiations fail, no network. They arent even required to deliver every channel in HD if they don't want to; many are not available in HD.
Time Warner is my Internet Service Provider. They are (now) not allowed to choose which Content Providers reach me. They are not allowed to restrict the bandwidth.
My basic question is why should ISPs be thusly restricted but not TSPs?
"The internet" is not the same as "television networks." Internet content providers do not operate on the same basis as a television network. Everyone has a voice on the internet. And very, very few people get paid to express their viewpoints. It is, essentially, an open, democratic forum.
It;s more like....I own a phone. My sister owns a phone. Even though we both go through different companies for that service, I can still make a call to her. Neither my phone company, nor her phone company, can deny that phone call. They cannot tell me whom I can or cannot call. I own a phone for a reason: To be able to make phone calls and communicate practically instaneously from a different locale from the one I am calling.
With the internet, I get to choose how I use that service. I am paying for the service. I expect to be able to use it how I wish.
Obviously, hone service is different from internet service. It actually does, physically, cost the phone company for a customer to make an out-of-network phone call. So naturally they should be able to recoup some of that cost.
With the ISP, there is no "network" that they specifically own. It is just "The Internet!" THAT is what I am paying for as a customer! They don't get to restrict content that I want to receive. That is not their right, nor has never been their right. That is virtually illegal in virtually every single other industry. You cannot restrict what a customer pays for after they have paid an agreed upon price for it. If a customer agrees to purchase a gallon on milk from a grocery store, the store does not get to dump or water down that milk. If I agree to pay a particular price to an ISP for "The Internet," I expect to receive "The Internet." In it's entirety. I am, afterall, paying for "The Internet!"
Now, I can see an argument to be made for throttling different data TYPES. For instance, streaming video is more taxing on Comcast's hardware than visiting a forum. But if Comcast must throttle streaming videos, they must throttle ALL providers of streaming video equally. Netflix doesn't get any preferential treatment over Youtube, for instance. That argument I could accept. I wouldn't agree with it, but at least it makes logical sense, and is entirely fair among all content providers. But the problem lies in the fact that if I agree to pay a particular price for a particular speed to access "The Internet," I fully expect the speed which I agreed to pay to for! If I pay 100 MB/s, I expect 100 MB/s. (Actual technical issues, as always, notwithstanding.)