This makes no sense. How does net Neutrality prevent ISP from billing certain subscriber? All it does is specify that you can’t bill someone for a certain connection speed and then turn around and selectively limit their packages from achieving those performance levels unless they go to some preferred service.
Didn;t you know? We have to keep using big-sounding words, and confusing phrases such as "two-sided markets!"
NN is simple. I have explained it several times, and you have just now explained it. Why everyone needs to make it into a highly complex issue, is beyond me.
I think you may have missed Francesca R 's thesis that she introduced in previous posts: she's submitting the hypothesis that NN would not be at risk in the first place if there was more competition between ISPs, which would make them more consumer-responsive.
She's not conflating the two so much as saying solving competition would make NN regulation unnecessary because sufficiently competitive ISPs would act that way voluntarily.
Yeah, I went down that avenue with Francesca. She seems to think that we can just up and simply say: "We are going to do LLU now. So Comcast must split their infrastructure properties and form a new company that cannot discriminate between ISPs for access to those lines."
Whenever I point out that implementing LLU is neither going to be easy, cheap, nor fast, she immediately says:
"That's a red herring! You don't understand LLU!"
All the while missing the point, of course, that the political willpower for such a large move just doesn't exist currently in this nation. (Congress approval rating is at an alltime low. It is controlled by Teabag ultra-Jesus-loving corporate master conservatives who have been bashing on Obama for pretty much everything under the sun, including stuff that happened before he was even born!)
NN is simple: Keep ISPs from double-charging for services already bought and paid for by various consumers! Why should a business pay another ISP, when they are already paying their own ISP to host their website? Why should a business have to pay for a service that a customer already pays for, so that customer can access their website at the agreed-upon speed on the customer's contract for said service?
If I pay for 1.05 MB/s second, I expect 1.05 MB/s! I don;t expect a business to pay Comcast, or else Comcast will purposely restrict my speed to something lower than I already paid for! And the website I desire to visit, already pays THEIR OWN ISP to host their website!
That's it. That;s all NN is. Considering that all conservatives keep whining about are: "Small businesses get the shaft!" they should be all for NN. It is, in effect, a rather bipartisan issue.