--As of May 12, 2014 3:02:28 PM +0200, Nick Hilliard is alleged to have said:
On 10/05/2014 22:34, Randy Bush wrote:
imiho think vi hart has it down simply and understandable by a lay person. <http://vihart.com/net-neutrality-in-the-us-now-what/>. my friends in last mile providers disagree. i take that as a good sign.
Vi's analogy is wrong on a subtle but important point. In the analogy, the delivery company needs to get a bunch of new trucks to handle the delivery but as the customer is paying for each delivery instances, the delivery company's costs are covered by increased end-user charges.
In the net neutrality debate, the last mile service providers are in a position where they need to upgrade their access networks, but the end-user pricing is not necessarily keeping pace.
--As for the rest, it is mine. So the fact that the USA has higher prices than many other countries, for slower service, and those prices are rising (mine went up three times in the past year, including them starting to charge rent for a cable modem I bought when I signed up, for the same service) doesn't mean anything? Or the fact that they are one of the most profitable market segments in the country? They have the money. They have the ability to get more money. *They see no reason to spend money making customers happy.* They can make more profit without it. Daniel T. Staal --------------------------------------------------------------- This email copyright the author. Unless otherwise noted, you are expressly allowed to retransmit, quote, or otherwise use the contents for non-commercial purposes. This copyright will expire 5 years after the author's death, or in 30 years, whichever is longer, unless such a period is in excess of local copyright law. ---------------------------------------------------------------