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Where else will the Feds be poking their noses, where they don't belong?
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I"m guessing .......... anywhere they can.
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Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
And this sort of thing happened back in the infancy of the phone companies, leading Strowger to invent his dial telephone system, which Bell immediately stole, or at least parts of it. Strowger was a Kansas City undertaker who thought that the live operators of the day were taking bribes to block calls to him and route them to his competitors, and he was probably right.EconDoc wrote:The problem with phone and cable service (and electric, gas, water and sewage, etc.) is that they are natural monopolies. There are some businesses that are just not well-suited to competition. In the case of utilities it is the need to construct infrastructure that is the problem. We don't want three different sets of phone lines run down the same street by three different companies. That is too expensive. The best way to deal with a natural monopoly is through regulation.
However, my concern about "net neutrality" is that it will somehow be co-opted into something approaching the fairness doctrine. Example, what if, when you Googled "NRA", you got the Brady Center instead, with the NRA's website buried three pages later? That is the sort of garbage that I fear from all of this.
Nice fantasy land you live in.loadedliberal wrote:just to clear out some of the lies that are currently echoing in the right right noise machine the net neutrally issue is simple it keeps the internet open and stops internet companies from charging you more for a you tube video than they do for checking your Facebook status its not an attempt to control the internet only to stop the corporations from ripping off consumers
conservatives vote their fears while liberals vote their dreams
Not sure what you are asking; but taking your question as asked:bnc wrote:What resources required for internet service to exist are limited?
USA1 wrote:If it aint broke...obama will fix it until it is.
RPB wrote:Not sure what you are asking; but taking your question as asked:bnc wrote:What resources required for internet service to exist are limited?
Example: Most of the Texas Hill Country=
1) no DSL available in most areas; what is available is more costly than in Metropolitan areas
2) no fibre optic nor cable available... priced roughly 10 times higher than metro areas
3) limited wireless availability, depending which side of a hill you live
4) Satellite mostly available
5) Dialup available
But, that's the free market and sparse population/expense of adding DSLAMS/running cables, it doesn't really need government controlling it more.... as a market grows/population increases, companies meet demand, same as cities/companies did providing water/sewer/phone and other services.... as demand increases, more companies arise; more competition and lower prices as people switch companies/providers.
I recall being on a waiting list in Houston for DSL/Cable and paying a lot when I got it ... now it's 10 times faster and a fourth of the price.... all without additional gov't controls.
If "free market" works ... why CHANGE it?
It's all about Gov't obtaining more power.USA1 wrote:If it aint broke...obama will fix it until it is.
I worded that really poorly. What I meant was, what factors of internet use are scarce such that the use of them by one internet user interferes with the use by another user.RPB wrote:Not sure what you are asking; but taking your question as asked:bnc wrote:What resources required for internet service to exist are limited?
Example: Most of the Texas Hill Country=
1) no DSL available in most areas; what is available is more costly than in Metropolitan areas
2) no fibre optic nor cable available... priced roughly 10 times higher than metro areas
3) limited wireless availability, depending which side of a hill you live
4) Satellite mostly available
5) Dialup available
The idea of net neutrality really has nothing to do with the lack of infrastructure resources (at least it shouldn't). As mentioned elsewhere, the idea is that one content provider can't pay a service provider (comcast, at&t, time-warner, etc) to inhibit access to network resources to other content providers. For example, Yahoo paying Comcast to restrict bandwidth to Google and Bing. It does NOT stop Yahoo from paying extra for more bandwidth.bnc wrote:....
So, what factors (infrastructural resources) of the internet are similarly scarce like lanes and time are at the shooting range? Bandwidth, time, number of websites accessed, downloaded/uploaded material, other stuff? (I'm not to savvy on IT infrastructure stuff)
So you're for it, but think that existing laws are sufficient? I can respect that. I might even agree with it, but I'd have to research existing laws first, and it's laundry night.G.A. Heath wrote:I'm very much in the smaller government camp, and I still see a need for Net Neutrality although the concept of more regulation scares the daylights out of me. Lets say AT&T and Google merge or simply make a deal that causes all AT&T customers to loose access to Microsoft unless they payup for a "Premium Access" package. Now users of Microsoft Operating systems can no longer get updates, and when a user goes to Microsoft.com they get directed to "Google Software Services". Suddenly when their computer is completely infested with malware an AT&T rep shows up and says "You must fix or replace your computer before we turn your internet back on because it is sending spam and/or attacking other machines. Among the papers he leaves is a CD with Google's Chromium OS that can be installed and will get their internet turned back on for Free.
Here's the rub: this scenario is possible, but we already have regulations and laws that will prevent it if applied correctly. We can use the existing anti-trust and monopoly laws/regulations to prevent this kind of abuse. So whats my position on Net Neutrality? I think that it is currently a solution in search of a problem. When the problem actually happens we should address it then and in a manner that minimizes government growth, preferable by using laws and regulations already in place to make things happen.