Newtons Bit
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2007
- Messages
- 10,049
Last I checked nobody got their webhosting for free.
My webhosting is free. I run it off my own computer.
Last I checked nobody got their webhosting for free.
In an internet where the number of potential web sites approaches infinity, how could an ISP list it's policy for every one? How could a consumer compare? And wouldn't it be sure to change tomorrow, or even next hour?Why isn't network transparency enough? That is, why isn't it sufficient for ISPs to disclose what if any preferential policies they use, and let consumers demand neutrality if it is valuable?
Why increase bandwidth when you can stifle competition by limiting it?Also, is this a temporary problem? Are Internet speeds increasing such that within a few years, bandwidth will no longer be effectively limited?
I am suspicious of net neutrality because I have a general suspicion of increasing government regulation to limit private companies from deciding what products and services to offer their customers. As long as ISPs cannot be deceptive, I don't see a reason to regulate their resource usage.
In an internet where the number of potential web sites approaches infinity, how could an ISP list it's policy for every one?
How could a consumer compare? And wouldn't it be sure to change tomorrow, or even next hour?
Why increase bandwidth when you can stifle competition by limiting it?
In an internet where the number of potential web sites approaches infinity, how could an ISP list it's policy for every one?
Is there any way for the government to facilitate the entrance of competitors rather than limiting existing ISP behavior?
I think it should be none of the ISP's business what is in my packets. Packets should be treated as a commodity. This egalitarian treatment of packets one thing that has made the internet great.
That may not solve it if the competitors all determine that network traffic shaping is more profitable than not shaping. If it's a universal fact about the industry, it will be what it will be.
... and in a world where it can never be profitable to be net neutral (i.e., it's not important enough for customers to pay for), why do we care enough to preserve it by fiat?
Yes there is (might be mobile link).Is there any way for the government to facilitate the entrance of competitors rather than limiting existing ISP behavior?
Incorrect and something of a pro-regulation canard (like when people object to the idea that there can ever be competition in gas and electricity supply by insisting you would need multiple wires and pipes to every address)It also means building multiple, redundant parallel networks. If you want 5x the competition, you have to build 5x the networks.
Even if they did have to, one would only need a relative few marginal consumers to effectively set prices, and the majority could remain rationally ignorant (in the same way as only a few shoppers are responsible for the checkout queues being almost identical length)They probably wouldn't have to do it at that level of detail.
Er, really? Very doubtful indeed.If there was no punishment for standing up in a theatre, there'd be no point in installing seats.
Such as with me. There's only one cable company here. There's also DSL, satellite, or that cell phone as a wi-fi station thing, but none of them can provide the same bandwidth I have. I'm not even using the highest level.
They are treated like utilities in a lot of the US. It's a franchise agreement, meaning a cable company has an exclusive contract with an area, but is under certain stipulations and pays the city.
One logical fallacy that skeptics should recognize is the fallacy of composition. It's the belief that what's good for the individual expands to being good for all individuals. Sometimes regulating behavior against competitive struggle produces an overall improvement.
An example is standing up while watching a movie. If there was no punishment for standing up in a theatre, there'd be no point in installing seats. Everybody would be standing because if you sat down you couldn't see past all the other standees. So we accept that ushers can expel somebody who's standing.

Isn't telcom infastructure subsidized?This is essentially the reason there is a debate.
These networks are almost entirely private property, but there is a credible argument that they have become an essential utility with distributed benefit, like public utilities such as roads or bridges.
In what world is net neutraility never profitable?... and in a world where it can never be profitable to be net neutral (i.e., it's not important enough for customers to pay for), why do we care enough to preserve it by fiat?
In the UK, it is.
Probably but transfer speed and volume is not yet too cheap to meter. Also, the demand curve has moved to the right almost as fast as the supply curve, which puts a brake on the price falling.
How does an ISP have a different policy for each website? If they have a more general policy on how to serve different sorts of websites with different criteria, that is what would need to be public.