Wave goodbye to Internet freedom

Earth is a finite place.



That is certainly your right, unless you're contractually obligated.



As reliable as the market makes it.
How reliable is this network, whan at any time any single person out of the hundreds of thousands owners of the properties your lines run through could decide they no longer want the cable on their land, and cut it out? Now tens of thousands of other people are no longer connected to the internet. Wash, rinse, repeat for roads (libertards are big on private roads), gas lines, electric lines, cable lines... Libertopia would be an economic basket place because infrastructure would be both shoddy and phenomenally expensive.
 
Pulling your leg?

I hope so.

You sir are getting BOTH legs pulled. HARD.

What are the decent arguments against regulation for content tiering (with the understanding that the regulation would prevent content tiering)?

I don't like the idea of having to pay more for certain content such as Youtube verses Walmart.com. That is just my wallet's personal opinion.

Arguments for content tiering are from an ISP's point of view: Youtube's streaming video eats bandwidth like a cow eats your lawn. Walmart.com doesn't eat so much bandwidth, especially if your ISP blocks the flash or other bling on the bottom tier. Middle tiers may allow flash or bling on buying sites. That's capitalism for you. :rolleyes:
 
How reliable is this network, whan at any time any single person out of the hundreds of thousands owners of the properties your lines run through could decide they no longer want the cable on their land, and cut it out? Now tens of thousands of other people are no longer connected to the internet. Wash, rinse, repeat for roads (libertards are big on private roads), gas lines, electric lines, cable lines... Libertopia would be an economic basket place because infrastructure would be both shoddy and phenomenally expensive.

I'm sure there are good free market solutions to the problems you detailed.
 
We tried it in the 19th century. It resulted in something called "robber barons". Perhaps you should look it up.

I have. I agree with Ayn Rand's assessment, they're some of the greatest humanitarians mankind has known.
 
Yeah, exploting child labor was a real high water mark in Humanitarianism.

So what? One of the greatest men who ever lived, Andrew Carnegie, employed child labor. Also, allowing children to work voluntarily let's them become savors much earlier in their life, leading to wise financial habits.
 
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Pulling your leg?



You sir are getting BOTH legs pulled. HARD.



I don't like the idea of having to pay more for certain content such as Youtube verses Walmart.com. That is just my wallet's personal opinion.

Arguments for content tiering are from an ISP's point of view: Youtube's streaming video eats bandwidth like a cow eats your lawn. Walmart.com doesn't eat so much bandwidth, especially if your ISP blocks the flash or other bling on the bottom tier. Middle tiers may allow flash or bling on buying sites. That's capitalism for you. :rolleyes:

The content tiering that you are referring to is legal under the current net neutrality rules. ISP's must treat all similar traffic the same: if an ISP restricts access to video, it must do so to all video traffic, not just the video traffic of its competitors.
 
So what? One of the greatest men who ever lived, Andrew Carnegie, employed child labor. Also, allowing children to work voluntarily let's them become savors much earlier in their life, leading to wise financial habits.

If the Rich do it, it has to be good and nobel.
This is proof of a theory I have that, despite her protests to the contrary, Ayn Rand philisophy is basically the Nietzschian Super Man Beyond Good and Evil theory dressed up in Aristolain Costume.
You apparently have no idea of what the term Humanitarian means.
What next? The Rand argument that compassion is basically evil?
 
We're a republic, not a democracy.

Also, most of the idiots who took the "Network neutrality" pledge lost their elections, so apparently democracy isn't on your side.

Who is John Galt?

So, in addition to Net Neutrality, political science is another thing you're having trouble understanding.

Pro tip - We're a liberal democracy, a representative democracy, a democratic republic and, in states where referenda are allowed, a direct democracy.
 
I wasn't aware everything on the internet was pre-screened by the government. I thought they just enforced infringements on an individual's rights. Must be fun to be the government screeners who have domain over 4chan.


:dl:
 
No, it's not. We can always build more bandwidth.


The different ISP has to use the same lines. Now maybe you're starting to understand the issue?

WildCat is right. Bandwidth is not a limited resource, or at least not limited for long. My Internet speed is increasing every year. Laying down and creating fiber for hungry modems of business/personal PC's is a job creator for Americans. Fiber is turning up in the most interesting of places including disused tunnels of every stripe, it is laid out in the most interesting of methods including robots and rats.
 
Network neutrality says that an ISP can't treat video coming from hulu.com differently than Netflix.com. It must be source and type agnostic. What is so horrible about that?
This contradicts what you claimed it was in post 103 (where you said it was regulation to compel cable owners to allow other ISPs to use the cables), and it is a softening of what you said it was in post 47 (where you thought NN regulated against content tiering):
But there are decent arguments against regulation for content tiering as well as for.
What are the decent arguments against regulation for content tiering (with the understanding that the regulation would prevent content tiering)?

So I think your words: "Those who oppose network neutrality really don't understand what it is about." should be applied to yourself as a proponent of network neutrality laws. Especially as you appear to have tacitly admitted that you only want these laws to supposedly "correct" for bad competition policy in your telco sector (post 74). Perhaps you can confirm this.

Now, what decent argument do you have for what you're proposing? And please clarify it is you're proposing because your exposition of it is by now rather muddled.

Broadband traffic is just as homogeneous as gas, say air for example.
:rolleyes:

Then you don't need an ISP at all do you? You can make a file of 1s and 0s and just rearrange it how you like.
 
Bandwidth is not a limited resource, or at least not limited for long.
So you confirm that its limited now.

My Internet speed is increasing every year.
So you confirm it isn't infinite speed.

Laying down and creating fiber for hungry modems of business/personal PC's is a job creator for Americans.
So you confirm that there is unsatiated demand for data carriage.

Looks like everything you wrote agrees that bandwidth certainly is a limited resource. (Hint: if it wasn't, it would be free, and no network neutrality debate would even exist).
 

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